I do want to try this game, but it's still too pricey for me so I'll wait.
KT
24.99 is my price I'll try it out at.
That's because Oblivion was a great game that sold an assload of copies. Dragon age on the other hand...That was quick.
Wasn't it like a year before the price on Oblivion dipped at all?
You guys should buy the CD-Key instead and register it via the EA download manager, it's a digital copy/download just as much as it is on Steam, but it ain't the Steam version, it'll just be installed in its own folder just like any retail games would. I myself bought the Digital Deluxe Edition back when it was released for only $25 at CDKeyHouse, but it's also available at DirectGameKeys for $20.39 at the moment. Additionally, CDKeyHouse currently have the Awakening expansion in stock for $24.99, I bought it earlier today and I received the key a few hours ago, that's also where I bought vanilla Dawn of War II, although I bought the expansion directly from Steam.
There are other CD-Key-sellers out there but those two are my personal favorites, I've never had a single problem with any of their keys, they're all legitimate, some of which are unregistered Steam games (such as Napoleon TW, or LD42, etc.). I highly recommened them for anyone looking for much lower prices (usually anyway).
For the most part, no. I believe that the way that most of this works is by "gifting" a copy of the game to the purchaser. It says right in Steam's EULA (and other places) that selling Steam gifts is prohibited.Is that legal? Sounds kind of fishy to me.
is it worth 10 bucks extra for whatever you get?
I might pick this up
I can't bare to spend that much for a game that lacks both online multiplayer and custom content generation unlike its Neverwinter Nights predecessor.
For the most part, no. I believe that the way that most of this works is by "gifting" a copy of the game to the purchaser. It says right in Steam's EULA (and other places) that selling Steam gifts is prohibited.
Battlefield Bad Company 2 allows you to deauthorize your Steam CD key from your account which allows you to sell the game if you wish. I don't know if any other Steam games allow this, but that would be the only "legal" way to purchase a Steam CD key from anywhere other than Steam.
That being said, if you were to do it, would Steam ever catch you? Extremely unlikely.
But where does the the price decrease come from? I can gift people games on steam but after Paypal fees and time and effort I'd end up charging more for the game then steam does.
As long as the game developer gets paid, I don't mind buying European license numbers (technically illegal, but IMO moral) but if this is the equivalent of paying to pirate a game then I'll avoid it.
Why is it illegal to buy European keys?
You could just as easily buy a boxed copy of the game from an importer and you would end up with a European key. GoGamer.com for example sells boxed imports.
$20 is my price point for almost any game nowadays. There are just so many quality older (and free) titles that I see no reason to pay more than that.
Wake me up when it reaches $20 or less(preferrably $5) on Steam.
You guys should buy the CD-Key instead and register it via the EA download manager, it's a digital copy/download just as much as it is on Steam, but it ain't the Steam version, it'll just be installed in its own folder just like any retail games would. I myself bought the Digital Deluxe Edition back when it was released for only $25 at CDKeyHouse, but it's also available at DirectGameKeys for $20.39 at the moment. Additionally, CDKeyHouse currently have the Awakening expansion in stock for $24.99, I bought it earlier today and I received the key a few hours ago, that's also where I bought vanilla Dawn of War II, although I bought the expansion directly from Steam.
There are other CD-Key-sellers out there but those two are my personal favorites, I've never had a single problem with any of their keys, they're all legitimate, some of which are unregistered Steam games (such as Napoleon TW, or LD42, etc.). I highly recommened them for anyone looking for much lower prices (usually anyway).
