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翻訳の問題を報告
I can install the game and play it, but that's about it - it's as if it never existed on Steam to begin with (other than being in my library)
I have quite a few games in my library that are no longer sold where I live, but I can still review them from within the library itself, and can still see all the features like cloud saves and controller support listed in the right hand-side
Since I have almost 2000 games in stock, I don't know what most of the games I have in stock if I just look at the name, I need the introductory video and game screenshots from the store page to help me determine what it is.
Well I guess you can use something like steamdb, if you log into it via Steam you can browse all your games like that, and if you then log out of Steam in the browser you can view all the store pages normally, it's a bit of a roundabout way but yeah
1. Most locked-in areas are not because of national laws.
2. Publishers are not national laws.
3. Steam is not meant to make games easier to play, so what's the difference between Steam and Epic, or maybe igg, but just playable.
1. Users who have not purchased the locked area cannot see the store page.
2. Consumers who have already purchased can see the store page and comment on it.
3. Consumers who have already purchased can no longer buy and give gifts.
Maybe it's a legal issue that they can't advertise something they're not actually going to sell to you? I have no idea.
You can still write reviews for those games from within your Steam library even if they're no longer available for purchase in your region, or can you not?
If it's a legal matter then there's no way around it. If not, could Valve consider optimizing it?