安装 Steam
登录
|
语言
繁體中文(繁体中文)
日本語(日语)
한국어(韩语)
ไทย(泰语)
български(保加利亚语)
Čeština(捷克语)
Dansk(丹麦语)
Deutsch(德语)
English(英语)
Español-España(西班牙语 - 西班牙)
Español - Latinoamérica(西班牙语 - 拉丁美洲)
Ελληνικά(希腊语)
Français(法语)
Italiano(意大利语)
Bahasa Indonesia(印度尼西亚语)
Magyar(匈牙利语)
Nederlands(荷兰语)
Norsk(挪威语)
Polski(波兰语)
Português(葡萄牙语 - 葡萄牙)
Português-Brasil(葡萄牙语 - 巴西)
Română(罗马尼亚语)
Русский(俄语)
Suomi(芬兰语)
Svenska(瑞典语)
Türkçe(土耳其语)
Tiếng Việt(越南语)
Українська(乌克兰语)
报告翻译问题
A Steam-verified site asking you for money?
An e-currency of some kind that requires you to spend real money before you can use it?
A support team that is demanding you pay for something?
This raises so many red flags, and can't even grasp what the heck the situation is from just that description. I'm pretty sure I don't even know which company's support team you're talking about.
Either way, it seems like a rather poor thought out attempt at blackmail. I don't see what kind of info that said person could possibly have that could cause you any harm; they may just be throwing a tantrum and trying to see what sticks. It's not like any information they have on you could get you banned on Steam, right?
Maybe someone who's more familiar with skin trading can help you since I know nothing about either trading sites or even the CS:GO skin trade at all (if it's even CS:GO; you didn't mention that), but it seems to me you're not in any harm: no support team from any private company, let alone Valve, would actively command you to pay real money.
You don't even need a single screenshot. They have literally no power over you to do anything. They cannot compel you to pay, and have no ability to remotely touch your actual account.
The person you faced was probably a kid. Sometimes you'll get someone who really wants to scare others to give them stuff, so they'll threaten to blackmail, sue, report or ban you in some way, but it's all talk and no action.
Don't even worry about it.
Blackmail over some crappy skin? Too damn funny. Ignore that fool. You've wasted too much time on that nonsense already.
Ask them how to pay, get walked throught the whole process, say you still don't understand, get walked through again, "Oh man I can't get it to work! is there any other way to pay?"
Different payment method, you don't understand, get walked through agian, still don't get it, walk through paying again, "Oh man, that won't work either!"
Ask more repetitive questions.
"Oh my god, you meant $15, I thought you meant fifteen cents!"
Let me try again. "Oh damn, it still doesn't work."
"Maybe if I try $150 it will work."
"Not working still."
"Can I mail you some cash? What's youir address?"
Keep it gping for as long as possible.
Look up the scammer's profile on: SteamRep.com
Report him with screenshot proof, then block.