MorpheusKajiir
New member
Trying to buy this game for a friend in the USA but Steam won't let me buy any game for someone in another country. How are people getting around this?
Even Humblebundle keys are often region locked. This is to prevent people getting around regional pricing. Generally developers offer games at lower prices to low earning countries (like South Africa where I live) because they would rather make some money, than none, which is what would happen if the price was too high.
Minimum wage is 21 ZAR ($1.44), so we get games at lower prices usually, with some exceptions like Battlefield 2042 which was significantly more expensive for South Africans for some reason.
Devs are being kind to us by letting us buy the games at a lower rate but we shouldn't abuse that by buying games for American and European friends at a fraction of the price, when they can afford full price. Assuming that is not what you're trying to do, and you're just being kind to a friend - you could just send your friend a Steam voucher for whatever it's going to cost on their side.
That can be tricky when it is a different country. I think it can do with taxation of transferring the steam credit/gift card.Can´t you buy credit for others on steam? Not sure tough.
I certainly am not an expert.
For legal purposes
https://help.steampowered.com/en/faqs/view/58D3-B80D-2943-3CC6#gifts
You can have restrictions placed on your account if you attempt to purchase the game in one region for another, including VPN or Humble Bundle. If you can't gift via steam, it is because of the price differences of the areas (buying it cheaper in one area for someone else in another higher price area). Steam will take this as violating the TOS.
Sounds easy, but there are tax considerations to take into account along with currency transfer rates. With one transaction and one account, not much of a problem; but it spread it over a large group of accounts and multiple transactions, the work adds up. It also would increase the liability that Valve would have to incorporate such a system. This becomes a higher accounting / legal / tracking burden for them to undertake when they have a simple solution already in place - Digital gift cardsWhich is a shame considering they could just allow you to pay the amount the other account would pay if they bought it themselves, including local taxes. Problem solved.
Sounds easy, but there are tax considerations to take into account along with currency transfer rates. With one transaction and one account, not much of a problem; but it spread it over a large group of accounts and multiple transactions, the work adds up. It also would increase the liability that Valve would have to incorporate such a system. This becomes a higher accounting / legal / tracking burden for them to undertake when they have a simple solution already in place - Digital gift cards
You buy it, gift it to your friend, and it will autmatically convert into their currency. Why add another system when they already have one that works?
Point is though, Valve already has a solution for it (DIGITAL GIFT CARDS in case you missed my previous posts). You can simply buy a $5, $10, $25, $50, or $100 gift, send it to your friend, and it will automatically go into their Steam wallet and converted into their currency (I am based in US so for me it goes $ to foreign currency).Point is that it is very possible so long as Valve wants to solve the problem and developers are on board with the process.
What can my friend buy with their digital gift card?
Their digital gift card will be delivered into their Steam Wallet to use right away once your friend accepts their gift. That means your friend can purchase games, or micro-transactions. If your friend's account is not limited, they can even purchase items from the Steam Community Market.
Can I still buy games for my friends?
Of course! Everyone loves getting personalized gifts. If you know which game your friend already wants then you can buy that game as a gift from the Steam store. However, if you aren't quite sure what your friend might want for, say their birthday or holiday, then a Steam gift card can be a great gift. Digital gift cards can also help you contribute to a friend's game purchase or to help them buy a micro-transaction item.
What happens if my friend lives in another country?
The digital gift card you purchased will automatically be converted into your friend's currency.
I don't think it works that way... if you log in from Germany into your own Steam account, and you already bought the game, you should be able to download it and play it anyway you want. Am I right? :suspicious:Vampirenostra said:Aha, nice idea by steam. So buying games in country of my residence - Ukraine means that I count be able to play them during travel as I didn't buy them in Germany or US for example... Great...