This was posted 11 years 7 months 21 days ago, and might be an out-dated deal.

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BioShock Infinite CD Key is USD$29.61 from CDKeyPort

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  • BioShock Infinite Cd Key works WORLDWIDE.
  • This cd key can be activated on STEAM.
  • You will get BioShock Infinite Cd Key (Photo of original cd key on Dvd)

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  • +3
    • This mob sell the keys as scans of retail packaging (or so they claim) - only purchased this a couple of days ago, working fine, and the image did look like a scan (which apparently comes from countries that have lower rrp on the game, like Russia/India/China etc), not just a serial key sent as text.
      I just wish companies would realise how much more sales they could make by reducing the RRP on games - best anti piracy tool there is IMHO!

      • Honestly, I think that if there was more money to be made by selling a game at $30 than at $80, companies would know and would do it in a heartbeat. You'd be crazy to think that EA doesn't have market research on that kind of thing.

        Plus, you'll be able to get it for $30 within 3 months of it going on sale anyway (unless it's a COD game).

        • I'm not saying more money, I'm saying more sales - rather than gouging out the honest people and having the rest turn to piracy…
          That said, I'm sure there's more money to be made by selling the game for more (EA's earnings last year were in the billions), but maybe they could make less and claim a greater customer base?

        • But with $50M budgets and that again (or more) on marketing, you have to charge a certain amount for the game to be feasible. Sure, EA has $4-5Bn in revenue each year, but their total profit for FY12 was only $76M. Making games, especially those like Bioshock Infinite (although it wasn't made by EA, it's a good exmaple of a title with AAA production, budget and marketing) ain't cheap.

          Don't get me wrong, I'm all for getting games on the cheap too (I was all over the GMG preorder), but at the same time I don't think $60-$70 is an undreasonable price to pay for 15 hours of quality entertainment. If you do, the option is always there to wait until it's going for $5-$10 on special.

        • I've always said somewhere between the $50-$60 would be a fair price point for new release games, especially when it comes to digital distributions, but we still seem to be sitting $20-$30 above that.

          Edit: also, considering the way the world economy is at the moment, 76million profit is pretty good (at least compared to the year before!)

    • That being said, the amount of keys that have ever been deactivated is minimal. I bought a russian BL2 key and it has been working fine for 3 months.

    • -5

      People should note that www.cdkeyport.com is a known seller of Russian keys and advocates ways to circumvent steam's regional locking (http://www.cdkeyport.com/omerta-city-of-gangsters-cd-key.htm…) which is directly against the steam subscriber agreement. The site neglects to mention that buying their Russian keys and activating them puts their steam account at risk of being banned.

      While this BioShock Infinite deal isn't a Russian key, everybody should stay away from this vendor simply because they're shady as hell. You should also consider the fact you have no idea where they get the key they're selling to you from, it might as well be stolen goods, and probably is in a lot of cases. Even if it isn't, they own the box of your game with your key in it. They can at any time dispute your ownership of a title, or even hijack your account, as they have proof that they own the CD-Key tied to your account. Even if you can wriggle out of that one, don't expect Steam to let you get away with it, because you're not supposed to be buying from them in the first place.

      It's also worthy of note that there's no difference between this and piracy, expect for the fact your just throwing your money away in an attempt to convince yourself that your copy is "legitimate".

      • Well, I think there is a difference. For starters, you are actually paying for the game. I mean, when GAME went bust, did they manage to pay out to all their creditors? Did publishers of games they sold at the death get all of the RRP profits (I really don't know, would love if someone could share with me though).

        Second, you are installing/playing/updating the game in line with the publishers/creators wishes. Piracy is a lot of cracks and potential flaws that often sour the gaming experience.

        But that's just my 2 cents :D

        • -4

          I'm pretty sure retail stores such as GAME purchase their copies from publishers prior to selling them, so the publishers still got their money. Plus, it's not fair to compare legitimate establishments to sites such as this which purposefully sells products to audiences that they're not supposed to.

          Secondly, just because you're downloading from an official sources doesn't mean that it isn't legitimate. The vast majority of game developers are venomously against sites like this, and the license itself that you receive isn't legitimate because it's broken terms of sale that publishers give retail stores in low income countries. That's the low-hanging fruit without getting into details about circumventing regional locking.

          If the license is illegitimate, there's virtually no difference between this and piracy and in no way are sites like this "in line with the publishers/creators wishes".

        • +1

          Places like game (and pretty much every retailer) purchase on credit, then pay an invoice at the end of 7/14/30/60/90 days, so while they technically pay from everything they get from the supplier, my question was, when GAME went bust, did they pay all outstanding invoices? I know it's a different circumstance to buying off key sites, but technically, if GAME didn't pay for it, and you bought it off game, is your copy now illegitimate?

          I do recognize there are a lot of dodgy places selling keys, and when it comes to having to go through a myriad of steps to circumvent region locking, I refuse to on the basis that obviously the publisher does not want you to do it, but with the release of region free games, I have to wonder if publishers are as concerned, or if they're just happy to see some money come in to pay for their games.

          I think a lot of this comes down to risk vs reward, and research into legitimate sites to purchase from :D

      • Yeah these sites tend to be shady but the thing is if they want people to buy from them they have to maintain their legitimacy or else they'll disappear very quickly. In cases where keys do get banned or pulled from your account, good key sellers will give you the refund and avoid games from those publishers or those specific games.

        If you do intend to buy from keysites, its up to you to do the research, a lot of them have trustpilot/web of trust histories you can check out.

    • So that's what happened to my Natural Selection key that i got from https://www.buygamecdkeys.com Tried contacting them about it through their site and Facebook but the continually ignore me!

      Screenshot that i'm not making it up! http://img33.imageshack.us/img33/1994/buygamecdkeys.jpg

  • ahhh i would of bought it from you guys a few days but you guys had no stock =[ maybe next time.

  • Bought one 10 minutes ago, I'll post up how long it takes to receive the key.

    I've never had a problem buying cdkeys so until i do I'll keep not being ripped off by
    paying way more just because i live in Australia.

    • Took about 12 hours for mine to come through

  • 2 hours 45 minutes to deliver, not bad. (steam says its an EU key)

    Registered the key in Steam no problems, game is downloading now.

    The game is 15GB btw.

  • We made the price down , it is $29.61 now with the coupon code "vipcode"

  • Bought one, scanned image of the key turned up 10 hours later. Works on Steam. No complaints here.

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