ติดตั้ง Steam
เข้าสู่ระบบ
|
ภาษา
简体中文 (จีนตัวย่อ)
繁體中文 (จีนตัวเต็ม)
日本語 (ญี่ปุ่น)
한국어 (เกาหลี)
български (บัลแกเรีย)
Čeština (เช็ก)
Dansk (เดนมาร์ก)
Deutsch (เยอรมัน)
English (อังกฤษ)
Español - España (สเปน)
Español - Latinoamérica (สเปน - ลาตินอเมริกา)
Ελληνικά (กรีก)
Français (ฝรั่งเศส)
Italiano (อิตาลี)
Bahasa Indonesia (อินโดนีเซีย)
Magyar (ฮังการี)
Nederlands (ดัตช์)
Norsk (นอร์เวย์)
Polski (โปแลนด์)
Português (โปรตุเกส - โปรตุเกส)
Português - Brasil (โปรตุเกส - บราซิล)
Română (โรมาเนีย)
Русский (รัสเซีย)
Suomi (ฟินแลนด์)
Svenska (สวีเดน)
Türkçe (ตุรกี)
Tiếng Việt (เวียดนาม)
Українська (ยูเครน)
รายงานปัญหาเกี่ยวกับการแปลภาษา
http://www.co-optimus.com/game/2630/pc/the-cave.html
It is, however, worth stating if a game allows more than one player on the same machine - it's a fairly rare commodity these days.
I can, however, see how the terminology might be confusing.
If they start defining "local co-op" as LAN, there will be a lot more people mad that they thought they bought a game that could be played on the same screen with a friend sitting next to you.
I believe "local co-op" is also referred to as "couch co-op" like in front of a big TV and 2 or more people playing on the same screen.
------------------------
OP's confusion is the "local" in "local area network."
You're responsible for your own mistakes, which this obviously was.
Valve is actually very accomodating when it comes to a game you have the system specs for but it doesn't run. Many people I know have never had trouble getting refunds for that.
I guess it also depends on how you approach them.
Raise a ticket and speak to steam support.
If you haven't played a signficant amount of time on one of the copies (or better yet, haven't played it at all) you may find them sympathetic to your story and willing to refund.
You have to ask them though. There's nothing much we can do.