Steam installieren
Anmelden
|
Sprache
简体中文 (Vereinfachtes Chinesisch)
繁體中文 (Traditionelles Chinesisch)
日本語 (Japanisch)
한국어 (Koreanisch)
ไทย (Thai)
Български (Bulgarisch)
Čeština (Tschechisch)
Dansk (Dänisch)
English (Englisch)
Español – España (Spanisch – Spanien)
Español – Latinoamérica (Lateinamerikanisches Spanisch)
Ελληνικά (Griechisch)
Français (Französisch)
Italiano (Italienisch)
Bahasa Indonesia (Indonesisch)
Magyar (Ungarisch)
Nederlands (Niederländisch)
Norsk (Norwegisch)
Polski (Polnisch)
Português – Portugal (Portugiesisch – Portugal)
Português – Brasil (Portugiesisch – Brasilien)
Română (Rumänisch)
Русский (Russisch)
Suomi (Finnisch)
Svenska (Schwedisch)
Türkçe (Türkisch)
Tiếng Việt (Vietnamesisch)
Українська (Ukrainisch)
Ein Übersetzungsproblem melden
Subscriptions can co-exist, and can also be manually "removed" (more like disabled) from the Help Desk -page if required.
Meanwhile, you could also just install the game from the disc and not activate the CD-key at all. Give it to someone else for example.
Just one question, how do I bypass the CD-key activation and get on with the installation? From what I've observed with all my other games is that activating the CD-key is the first step to installing from a disk, the first time.
EDIT: I'll see how my Borderlands 2 disc behaves.
It skipped the CD-key prompt entirely since I own the game on Steam.
http://dragonsdogma.wikia.com/wiki/Dragon's_Dogma:_Dark_Arisen
O'h, ok.
You can also have a friend copy the game if they have it, then place the files on your computer. This way you don't have to buy it twice.
And that should be possible, but I figured I'll make sure how it is with my retail copies just incase since OP had been previously prompted with CD-key prompts (presumably in scenarios where he hadn't yet activated the game himself)
Figured it's better to be safe than sorry.
EDIT:
That works too.
In fact, even better than my suggestion, if OP does get prompted (for whatever reason.)
Like I said, I wanted to avoid downloading the complete game online, although I do have a pretty good internet connection.
Is this really possible ? The entire concept of DRM is to discourage doing just this. If you navigate to your installation directory, you will see that you will have only package files, which are accessible only from the Steam Client. Not sure whether copying the installation files would really help the cause.
Once he got on his account, he was able to play the games just fine.
With Dragon's Dogma, you will want to copy
As well as this folder:
Place them in the corresponding locations on your computer, while your Steam -client is OFF.
As Teutep said, it is.
I've done this several times myself between my computer and my wife's. With Steam, the DRM is your account. As long as you have a license to play the game on your account (or shared through Family Sharing) then you can copy any game over to another computer and play it.
This works out for us since I mainly play single player games, so we can copy the game's over and she can play as well, while online. It saves bandwidth too, though we have no limit and as 130Mb/s (about 15 MB/s) connection, it feels like a waste to download it again. We also have a shared 4TB drive on a Gigabit network to make copying easier.
Dragon's Dogma does not contain any additional DRM either.
And probebly saved you about $40 bucks to boot.
And sorry, but I don't accept friend invites.
You sure did !!
That's cool man. I am quite new to Steam ... Just wanted few friendly people around.
Was more of a GFWL gamer, until it was pulled. Now I am all over the place .. Steam,Origin, GOG, Ubisoft ...