On Kinguin you can get Darkness II steam key for $AU 2.59
Kinguin offers many products for which you can pay using many payment methods.
Some information about Kinguin buyer protection:
http://www.kinguin.com.au/buyer_protection
On Kinguin you can get Darkness II steam key for $AU 2.59
Kinguin offers many products for which you can pay using many payment methods.
Some information about Kinguin buyer protection:
http://www.kinguin.com.au/buyer_protection
The offer is a regular product without any regional limitations and Kinguin will help with any problem that could occur. Yes, Kinguin doesn't take responsibility ONLY for issues that were caused by Russian keys but those offers are marked as RU. If a customer encounter any problem with the product - invalid key/used key/problems with activation - Kinguin support will help to resolve it.
Kinguin is a proxy in the transactions however the customers do not have to contact the sellers. Kinguin is keeping the sellers money for 30 days and after that time, if there were no issues with the product the money is released.
If you have any questions, feel free to ask. I will be more than happy to answer them.
So If someone buys a game and the game disappears anytime in the first 30 days you will refund the money?
If the seller will not be able to resolve your issue, then yes. He will be charged with the cost of your order and Kinguin will return your money.
This is not a Russian key. This is a regular, region free offer.
Kinguin is not an authorised key seller.
I'd say to be wary of these type of sites. It's a grey market operation. Steam/Valve doesn't have to honor any of these keys because even though it doesn't break any laws, it's breaking TOS and EULA. Even if a key registers fine today, you may find the game gone two weeks from now. Use at your own risk even with their so called 'buyer protection'.
Who knows where these keys are from?
Kinguin itself is not a seller - it is only a platform that helps people to safely buy/sell keys. There are many sellers, some are known key stores and every customer has the possibility to decide which offer to choose. Some of the keys come from previous steam sales and being resold when the steam price goes back to the regular price, some are scanned boxes. Kinguin verifies all of the sellers in order to reject the "high risk" sellers.
Kinguin Support Team sometimes contacts Steam support and usually there are no problems with getting help from them.
Sometimes and usually.
I've bought 3 games (1 steam 2 origin activated) now from the Kinguin site with no issues. Sure there may be dodgy sellers that offer keys but its up to the purchaser to use appropriate common sense and buy from a seller they believe is reputable. Kinguin is offering a platform for me to then make those types of choices all on the one website.
Well said. I don't understand why people get so up in arms about being responsible for their own actions. The old adage "if it's too good to be true…" always applies.
Kinguin just provides links to game key stores and half of them could be dodgy. And I bet their buyers protection doesn't protect against if your Steam account gets locked because of a dodgy stolen key that some dodgy game key store sold to you.
And i just read through the Kinguin buyers protection and it's clearly saying that they don't protect against transactions concerning Russian keys that run into regional lockout problems. A lot good that buyers protection is.