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번역 관련 문제 보고
I would disagree with there being no second hand PC game market. The game selection at Value Village changes every day, and Video Game Trader seems to have different stock every week. Their prices are higher, so they don't go as fast as Value Village. I also snatch up anything that looks good to me and is cheap. Of course, I'm probably wrong. Usually am.
I just wish I knew it was locked in with Steam. I wouldn't have purchased it if I knew. Oh well, I'm not really upset, just very disappointed and annoyed, but then again Borderlands 2 doesn't look appealing to me anyways. I'm not into software piracy, so I guess I'll never know what it's really like.
What I am saying is that the vast majority of physical PC games have for years now, included a single one time use activation code permanently locking that game to an account whether it is on Steam, Origin, Uplay, Games for Windows Live, etc..
http://store.steampowered.com/app/49520/
Might want to grab it now (-75%)
Shops can sell non-digital PC games that don't require an activation code as second hand but 99% of modern games cannot be resold. You should speak to the shop about this as if someone raises a complaint; they could end up in severe legal issues with their local consumer body.
I never realized that. I've never encountered a one-use key before, until now. I guess game developers are trying to get more money out of the consumer. It's a good thing I don't find most new releases appealing.
That means that pretty much every store that will sell video games are in the wrong. Value Village, Goodwill, Video Game Trader, a store here called Revolution, and even EB Games (also known as GameStop) has done it. That also means that once a game is no longer being sold brand new, you can't legally obtain it ever again, and it puts broke losers like me at a disadvantage.
What should I do with this useless copy of Borderlands 2? Burn it? Throw it in the garbage? That's what it's worth at this point.