Nainstalovat Steam
přihlásit se
|
jazyk
简体中文 (Zjednodušená čínština)
繁體中文 (Tradiční čínština)
日本語 (Japonština)
한국어 (Korejština)
ไทย (Thajština)
български (Bulharština)
Dansk (Dánština)
Deutsch (Němčina)
English (Angličtina)
Español-España (Evropská španělština)
Español-Latinoamérica (Latin. španělština)
Ελληνικά (Řečtina)
Français (Francouzština)
Italiano (Italština)
Bahasa Indonesia (Indonéština)
Magyar (Maďarština)
Nederlands (Nizozemština)
Norsk (Norština)
Polski (Polština)
Português (Evropská portugalština)
Português-Brasil (Brazilská portugalština)
Română (Rumunština)
Русский (Ruština)
Suomi (Finština)
Svenska (Švédština)
Türkçe (Turečtina)
Tiếng Việt (Vietnamština)
Українська (Ukrajinština)
Nahlásit problém s překladem
The only thing they can do with it is use the "retrieve account" option and enter that key and the owner of the game will get an email associated with this cd-key but only they will see it.
The better question is whether an account can be hijacked or stolen.
In theory, yes. But not the way you paint it. By randomly finding a key, no. By providing actual proof of ownership, that is by providing the physical slip of paper on which the key is printed, maybe yes. If that slip of paper exists in the first place of course and only if the owner doesn't have any proof of ownership by themselves.
So you may want to refrain from redeeming keys from shady sources.
If that's just the key that has been rendered to a picture, not photographed, then no. Unless you got some mad Photoshop skillz, I guess.
Is a screenshot of the key in game a picture of the physical slip of paper?
Would be weird if you only needed one product key to hijack an account.