Dear Steam User,Steam will soon be priced in New Zealand Dollar! If your Steam wallet has any money in it on March 24th, 2015, your U.S. Dollar balance will be converted to New Zealand Dollar, at a conversion rate dictated by market value at the time of conversion.To view your account balance, simply log into your Steam client or the Steam website at http://www.steampowered.com. Once you have logged in, you will see your balance in the upper-right corner next to your account name.Thanks,The Steam Support Teamhttp://support.steampowered.com
Does that mean it will be even easier for them to rip us off with regional pricing?
Also in other possibly related news, Steam now acknowledges it's rights and responsabilities under the CGA.http://www.gameplanet.co.nz/news/g5508c90d8aeb1/Steam-adds-refund-clause-for-New-Zealand-subscribers/
Why not?I'd sure as shit want the CGA to apply to video games when a dev rolls out a buggy as fuck game when they promised a fully functional product.Or when a spate of promised features doesn't make it into the final retail copy of the game. This seems to be happening a lot.
Quote from Retardobot: March 19, 2015, 01:05:07 pmWhy not?I'd sure as shit want the CGA to apply to video games when a dev rolls out a buggy as fuck game when they promised a fully functional product.Or when a spate of promised features doesn't make it into the final retail copy of the game. This seems to be happening a lot.Because it wouldn't make sense, the CGA wasn't written to cover digital products. It's for physical product, like if you buy a washing machine, and it doesn't wash clothes, then it's clearly faulty.But a game is much more subjective, the game could crash because of the players system, that's not really the games fault.Plus it's easy to prove a washing machine is faulty, you can send it back. Can't do that with a game.I'm not saying there shouldn't be a refund option, I think there should. But on they other hand it wouldn't be fair if people started asking for refunds just because they didn't like a game.After all, there are lots of ways to find out about a game before you buy it, i.e steam user reviews.
Quote from Sire NZ CH Spacemonkey: March 19, 2015, 11:47:05 amDoes that mean it will be even easier for them to rip us off with regional pricing?Got it in one.
I think it will be a matter of time till we have a watershed case on the CGA against Digital media. The only problem is that NZ is Small and no one gives a Fuck about it.For example - with the Sims 5 release where someone couldn't login for several days in Single Player mode - I reckon under the CGA someone could make a claim - the problem is that if the ruling was in favour of the Gamer - the international Games industry wouldn't care.
Quote from The Demon Lord: March 19, 2015, 02:37:03 pmI think it will be a matter of time till we have a watershed case on the CGA against Digital media. The only problem is that NZ is Small and no one gives a Fuck about it.For example - with the Sims 5 release where someone couldn't login for several days in Single Player mode - I reckon under the CGA someone could make a claim - the problem is that if the ruling was in favour of the Gamer - the international Games industry wouldn't care.Not being able to connect to the game server doesn't indicate the game is faulty. It just could be the server is under very high load, and is usually the case on launch day.
This is why applying the CGA to digital products, especially games, doesn't make sense.
The CGA states 'THIS ACT ARE GUARANTEES WHICH INCLUDE THAT SOFTWARE IS OF ACCEPTABLE QUALITY. IF THIS GUARANTEE IS NOT MET THERE ARE ENTITLEMENTS TO HAVE THE SOFTWARE REMEDIED (WHICH MAY INCLUDE REPAIR, REPLACEMENT OR REFUND).'
The point is it's the retailers decision on which remedy to provide.
It's doesn't make sense to Replace a game. The developers will work on bugs, you could consider that "repair". But game developers are going to fix bugs anyway, regardless of CGA, which makes the CGA pointless.And even if they don't, the CGA only covers the contract is between us and steam, not the developer.