didn't you technically break some kind of rule when you let some else use your account?ninja51 said:Uh.... no? My Xbox live account has a horrible reputation. My brother played Halo 3 a long time ago, fucked around and got a bad rep. Dont really use the mike and I rarely quite midgame, but according to this system, I would have to pay more for games. That payment system involves paying real money for entirely subjective things, it means no one can share accounts, its generally all around bullshit
I have seen that pricing displayed quite often. But one wonders if Valve is directly responsible for that? I take into consideration the part where Microsoft feels the desire to charge for Valve DLC that otherwise is free to PC and PS3 customers. It is quite possible the price hike for overseas is due to shipping costs and tariffs which Valve has zip control over except maybe taking a loss on the price so it actually equates better.Pedro The Hutt said:The ?1=/=$1 [http://steamcommunity.com/groups/1e1us] group would like a word with you.samsonguy920 said:Seriously, Valve has been just about the fairest company out there, and suddenly Gabe wants to do this? Did he go on a diet suddenly and now he is cranky because his blood sugar is low?
Here's just one recent example of how Valve treats gamers in Europe, when Need for Speed: Hot Pursuit was discounted 50%, it turned out that the following prices were present around the globe.
US: $14.99
UK: £14.99 or $24.29
EU: ?24,99 or $35.26
Admittedly, most of the time the UK gets a fair price conversion, but almost invariably games on Steam are vastly more expensive on the European mainland due to Valve keeping the number of the dollar price and replacing the $ with a ?, thus effectively boosting the price by whatever the euro has over the dollar at the time of purchase (on average some 35%, at the time of writing 41%)
Yeah, I'm gonna stop playing online because one asshole quit.Bonelord said:This is bad for everyone, nice players, mean players, developers, everyone.
An asshole won't buy the game because his price went up, then the good players will have fewer people to play against, they stop playing the game and don't buy more steam games for the same reason. Simple...
I think you're taking what i said a bit too literally...BarbaricGoose said:Yeah, I'm gonna stop playing online because one asshole quit.Bonelord said:This is bad for everyone, nice players, mean players, developers, everyone.
An asshole won't buy the game because his price went up, then the good players will have fewer people to play against, they stop playing the game and don't buy more steam games for the same reason. Simple...
Not quite that simple.
I second this.LavaLampBamboo said:This sounds like a good system, but surely this would become griefed. What happens if I happen to have a really crappy connection and then I drop out a bunch of times. I don't want other people to have to pay extra for other games.
Or if it was like a reporting system where you report a person being really offensive. That'd just end up being misused all the time...
But it's an interesting concept. I'd love to see where it goes and how this idea develops.