Originally posted by: skace
And you think that's what the majority of the offenders were? All immigrants from Russia and Thailand right?
So do you agree that immigrants should be entitled to those purchases? If not, what relevance does your question have?
No, they were Americans who saw that they could pay a lot less to buy it from another country.
Yep, it?s called bargain hunting. That?s a concept of capitalism, namely paying less to get the same thing legally. What?s next? I can?t buy clothes from India when on holiday and wear them into the U.S. because they?d cost me more locally?
Companies engage in the concept of importing where they buy cheap goods overseas and then sell them locally for a profit. This is economics 101, but you?re making it sound like some kind of heinous act.
Is Valve some kind of charity that I should treat them any differently as a consumer? If they choose to price games lower in other markets, it?s my business if I source them from those markets.
And yes, it took Valve awhile to catch on, because they thought they were doing foreign countries a favor, and didn't expect Americans to dig so low.
Valve was simply exercising their DRM muscle. The fact is, they were legitimate CD keys that were purchased and were working for months before they were retroactively disabled without warning. Furthermore, there?s absolutely nothing in the EULA that stated such restrictions which Valve later imposed.
Again, neither Starforce or SecuROM have the ability to do this, yet somehow they?re treated as the devil incarnate compared to Steam. But when Steam shuts down entire accounts without warning, that?s okay because those people were ?evil? for trying to find a legitimate bargain. :roll:
And as for GOG, this is exactly why GOG is old games.
So do you agree that Steam games as old as GOG?s should have no such restrictions? Let?s see, GOG has 2004/2005 titles which would cover both HL: Source and HL2, so they should?ve never been disabled?
If not then what relevance does your statement have?
And an international price means that the price is going to be MORE for foreign countries, not less. Did I cover everything?
Actually no, they?re the same price, either $5.99 or $9.99. Furthermore GoG can?t shut them down, retroactively or otherwise.
Back when I started playing WOW, we played with a bunch of UK people. When WOW was released in the UK they repurchased it for the UK and started over. They didn't bat an eyelash at buying WOW twice, as they knew what they were getting into when they bought into the US servers and tied the game to their US account.
That?s their problem, not mine.
Region coding must really piss you off.
Why? Region encoding can?t retroactively disable multiple previous working DVDs without warning like Steam can.
Region encoding is established and known, unlike Steam?s retroactive ?policies?.
Region encoding is trivial to circumvent without any risk, unlike Steam. Furthermore, most standalone players require at most a button combination on the remote to de-region them; in many cases they?re already de-regioned out of the box.