Instalar Steam
iniciar sesión
|
idioma
简体中文 (Chino simplificado)
繁體中文 (Chino tradicional)
日本語 (Japonés)
한국어 (Coreano)
ไทย (Tailandés)
български (Búlgaro)
Čeština (Checo)
Dansk (Danés)
Deutsch (Alemán)
English (Inglés)
Español - España
Ελληνικά (Griego)
Français (Francés)
Italiano
Bahasa Indonesia (indonesio)
Magyar (Húngaro)
Nederlands (Holandés)
Norsk (Noruego)
Polski (Polaco)
Português (Portugués de Portugal)
Português - Brasil (Portugués - Brasil)
Română (Rumano)
Русский (Ruso)
Suomi (Finés)
Svenska (Sueco)
Türkçe (Turco)
Tiếng Việt (Vietnamita)
Українська (Ucraniano)
Informar de un error de traducción
But just like buying an album on cassette probably didn't get you a CD twenty years later, neither does the disc version of a game get you a digital license from a random store that digitally distributes the game twenty years later.
While I do recall adding a handful of games that I bought on disc to Steam years ago. As mentioned, it's not universal. In fact I don't think you can even add old Half-Life keys from those years anymore. At some point you're just on the hook for a new license.
GOG also offered (offers?) to add the Stalker games to your library when you send them your "multiplayer-key" which you can find in-game in the multiplayer menu.
But these are rare exceptions, I guess.
I thought that was a neat little promotion.
I got Morrowind years ago when I had time to mess about more. These days I'm married with a 5 year old daughter, working from home and sometimes on two jobs so I get little chance to play except on the laptop in the evening when my wife is watching the French satellite TV that I can't follow!
LOL, that includes right now, it's $4.94 for the GOTY edition of Morrowind.
i have a VHS tape of the hobbit i want it on dvd.
https://isthereanydeal.com/game/elderscrollsiiimorrowindgameofyearedition/info/
Some places even cheaper.
It has been as low as $3.74 on Steam and the Spring Sale may be around the corner, if you want the Steam version of the game.
Except the license also stipulates the medium that you can use to access said content.
You buy a VHS, the license that comes with it is for the content on the VHS tape. If make a copy onto another VHS tape, then the license does not apply to the new VHS. Same if you copy the VHS content to a DVD.
So it is quite unreasonable. The creators of said content sold it in good faith, under the terms of the agreement. Users are the ones who tend to break the agreement far more often then the creator does, though often unknowingly.