

- #KINGUIN RAINBOW SIX SIEGE STEAM UPDATE#
- #KINGUIN RAINBOW SIX SIEGE STEAM FULL#
- #KINGUIN RAINBOW SIX SIEGE STEAM PRO#
- #KINGUIN RAINBOW SIX SIEGE STEAM PC#
- #KINGUIN RAINBOW SIX SIEGE STEAM WINDOWS#
How are the keys obtained and sold so cheaply? This is where legality and illegality crossover into a "grey" area.
#KINGUIN RAINBOW SIX SIEGE STEAM FULL#
This is mainly because they have to, but also because they don't see the full sale profit, so they charge a few pence in order to cover their expenses for refunds in the event the seller doesn't pay up for a refund. They take a cut of the sale, and offer their own "insurance" in case a transaction goes bad. They're merely a vessel for transactions to be made between the seller and buyer, similar to eBay. For the most part (CJS excluded, they buy keys and sell them themselves), they do not buy and sell keys. Is G2A, G2Play, Kinguin, CJS CD Keys et al illegal? The answer is no.
#KINGUIN RAINBOW SIX SIEGE STEAM PC#
I feel I should chime in about key selling sites, then after the fact I'd appreciate it if people stuck with the OP's PC build and save the grey market talk for another topic. Let's face it, the world isn't built on logic, but on profit and money. Steam needs this pressure to stay on edge, for example. In a similar vein, for gaming, the win-win change here is that the prices of games will remain competitive and that the DRM-based shops lose the battle eventually. These changes need to be win-win, or they won't happen. At the same time I applaud large-scale changes that actually have impact, such as moving from the old fashioned light bulb to LED lighting. Its exactly the same as being overly environmentally friendly - it costs you a shitload of money and the net result is zero because big industries do whatever they can to make profit, look at how long it takes the world to get real on climate change. The battle on this issue is not going to be fought with my wallet, simply because my wallet is never going to solve this issue anyway. I'm not paying for somebody else not doing their job, just someone who looks for the best deal for a product.
#KINGUIN RAINBOW SIX SIEGE STEAM UPDATE#
I am not going to pretend to be the saint that pays the premium for lacking legislation by governments that are too lazy to update law to the new reality they call the internet - a reality that's about as old as myself actually. It's the same issue that happens all over the world, called hypocrisy.
#KINGUIN RAINBOW SIX SIEGE STEAM WINDOWS#
I wish I could kill myself instead of using windows (OSX can suck it too).
#KINGUIN RAINBOW SIX SIEGE STEAM PRO#
Logitech G5 - Sentey Revolution Pro - Sentey Lumenata Pro - multiple wireless logitechs Titanium HD - Onkyo HT-RC360 Receiver - BIC America custom 5.1 set up (and extra Klipsch sub)Ĭorsair 850W V2 - EVGA 1000 G2 - Seasonic 500 and 600W units (dead 750W needs RMA lol) Lian Li open bench - Fractal Design ARC - Thermaltake Cube (still have HAF 932 and more ARCs) Xfire OCed 7950s - Powercolor 290x - Oced Zotac 980Ti AMP! (also have two 7870s)Ĭrucial 250GB SSD, Kingston 3K 120GB, Sammy 1TB, various WDs, 13TB (actual capactity) NAS with WDs Mugen 2 rev B push/pull - Hyper 212+ push/pull - Hyper 212+ġ6GB Gskill - 8GB Gskill - 16GB Ballistix 1.35v

Sabertooth R2.0 - Gigabyte Z87X-UD4H-CF - AsRock Z97M KIller This goes for Windows keys, but also games. Thus far, all I see is companies taking the hit themselves, Microsoft included, because it is simply not worth chasing down individual sales and customers for as little as 10-40 bucks per product.Īnd it will remain so as long as the group that buys these keys doesn't grow exponentially. What's more, I have no real, plausible way of finding out a specific key is legit or not. All it looks like, is a good and plausible discount.

And when I see OEM keys on Google for 30 bucks a pop, and find them on a keysite for 19-25, I really can't say that 'looks like it is not legit'. The only thing I really NEED to do as a consumer, is convince myself its legit.

I care about national law, nothing else, and that law offers consumer protection to a great degree and puts the responsibility of a legit product almost entirely in the hands of the seller. You can put whatever the F ever in your EULA, I honestly don't give a damn. Buyer buys product that looks legit, does its research as far as can be reasonably expected, finds nothing strange - versus the EULA that is already been very clearly put on the backbench because (inter)national laws always come first and last. It will be an interesting case if it EVER reaches court.
