Posted December 10, 2013
Steam sales that end on December 13th:
Dragon Age: Origins - Ultimate Edition > $7.49 (Dragon Age: Origins, Dragon Age: Origins - Awakening and all nine content packs)
Dragon Age: Origins > $4.99 (Blood Dragon Armor & The Stone Prisoner)
Dragon Age™: Origins Awakening > $4.99
Even on Steam are not safe from 3rd party DRM and only time will tell if the remove it like e.g. Of Orcs and Men and quite some other games.
I fell into that trap lately with Disciples 3 Reincarnation which has a 3 activation limit also. Since them I am on paranoid mode again.
In the TW2 case the only Version that does not f+++ the customer, as trusteft said, is sold by GOG. What levels it out for me is the fact that Steam will reset my activation limit if I ask them to.
Bothersome? Yes.
Appreciated? Even more.
What I'm interested in is who made the final decision on the activation limit. It just seems like someone up top made a terrible, unalterable decision, and someone down below tried to fix it as best as he/she could.
Dragon Age: Origins - Ultimate Edition > $7.49 (Dragon Age: Origins, Dragon Age: Origins - Awakening and all nine content packs)
Dragon Age: Origins > $4.99 (Blood Dragon Armor & The Stone Prisoner)
Dragon Age™: Origins Awakening > $4.99
yarow12: What is the point of an activation limit? To me, it sounds like a "Shove it" declaration to everyone who purchases it.
dyscode: That's it - there is no point. It's the Publisher's middle finger to the customer. Even on Steam are not safe from 3rd party DRM and only time will tell if the remove it like e.g. Of Orcs and Men and quite some other games.
I fell into that trap lately with Disciples 3 Reincarnation which has a 3 activation limit also. Since them I am on paranoid mode again.
In the TW2 case the only Version that does not f+++ the customer, as trusteft said, is sold by GOG.
Bothersome? Yes.
Appreciated? Even more.
What I'm interested in is who made the final decision on the activation limit. It just seems like someone up top made a terrible, unalterable decision, and someone down below tried to fix it as best as he/she could.