This is a tempest in a teapot.
Steam ended pricing in those currencies and reverted the prices to USD without local adjustment.
Any developers who want to sell in Turkey or Argentina will set a local price in USD.
This really only affects older/abandoned games where the developer never updates pricing. Those games will be left charging US prices in poorer countries.
Yeah it’s a nonsense. Argentina and Turkey have atrocious economies, with inflation at crazy levels. Turkey’s is at 60% and Argentinas is at 143% currently, on a background of years of terrible economic decisions. Their local currencies are effectively trash so it makes absolute sense for Steam to move to dollars if they’re going to continue bothering trading in those countries.
I’ll cry for you, Argentina.
It was already discovered that that was a big and game devs need to fix it manually for now.
This has been planned for months and every Turkish friend I talked to said “if you want anything from Steam before the end of the month I’ll gift it to you, just send the $3” so no, it’s not a bug.
In my experience that loophole has not worked for a long time. I have never been able to redeem gifts from friends in a low-cost region while I’m outside of the country. Even though my Steam account is also based in that same region.
Blame the gray resellers. If the world courts had found those sites illegal, then devs could likely still set regional prices without having 90% of them getting resold to the outside world.
Looks like Steam just became a service issue.
Looks like those countries have a currency issue with hyper inflation.
Gabe should have just fixed those countries currency issues instead obviously
Valve did have a staff economist, but he left to become finance minister for Greece. (He didn’t last very long in either position.)
That would be fun to add to a resume lol
He will, right after releasing Half Life 3.
Por que no los dos?
And, ya know, poverty