I got a place on the 512GB with Controller list, and got an email a few days after they started. I ordered it on Friday the 3rd and got it today on Thursday the 9th. The tracking codes were all over the place and gave different estimates depending which branch of each company I used. Steam claimed it was shipped when the courier said they hadn’t got it so I was worried for a few days. But this morning Royal Mail (UK customer) sent me an email saying it would arrive today, while GLS said it would arrive tomorrow.

Safe to say I’m happy to have it now and be playing games!

  • auzy1
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    23 hours ago
    1. There is no good way to write any criminal law, as I said

    2. As a condition of sale (civil) It would potentially completely fuck steams reputation. Gamers don’t like companies who sue their customers. If I gift a steam controller to a partner who becomes an ex and they sell it, suddenly I get sued. Great

    3. Every steam critic would use it to attack steam.

    4. You cannot add a condition of sale in many countries to control the resale of a physical product. There are literal ownership laws . Which is the point I’m possibly not making as clear as I need to be

    5. They could just limit 1 per customer and require a deposit to stay in the queue. And offer something beneficial like a free game which directly is added to the account that orders. But that screws people who are getting them as gifts. Or prioritize people based on library size for the initial orders / randomize the queue a bit

    6. The reason I said write the example, is because what is the penalty going to be? Cancel their account? Disable the hardware?

    Again, it’s a bad idea. You’re trying to solve a problem that normally doesn’t exist, won’t in 6 months and will cause a much bigger one.

    As much as I hate scalpers, this is delusional that can not only legally not be enforced in many countries, but would be criminal in many countries and have a huge probability to backfire