• @avater@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    how the fuck is it impossible for me to get a decent, not taken, username in most online games or launchers but these scammers can change their games to whatever the heck they want?

    Shouldn’t be hard to implement a check if the game name and other info is already listed in the store somewhere else…

    • ampersandrew
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      51 year ago

      I just started typing in common video game title words in Steam’s search, and I found several games just called “Void”. We can extrapolate that scenario out and say maybe a new game is the first one on Steam to be called Void, but maybe there was an old DOS game called Void that came to Steam later after rights issues have been resolved. There’s also the very common situation of a remake and its original version both being available on Steam, and maybe different companies own the rights to each one, like Star Wars: Battlefront. Perhaps these and other reasons are why those checks don’t exist, but maybe they will now if these sorts of scams become more common.

  • @Bananobanza@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Why even try this? You can refund games within two hours of gametime or two weeks from purchase date. The moment someone launches the game, it’s immediatley obvious that it’s not Helldivers and smashes that refund button.

    • @MD756@lemmy.world
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      141 year ago

      If a kid’s got their parent’s credit card, I doubt they will bother with requesting a refund. They’ll just smash other ‘buy’ buttons until the game they want is downloaded. I’m sure some adults are like this, too…

      • @CileTheSane@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        It’s going to get reported and found by Steam pretty quickly. Steam already holds onto the money from sales for 2 weeks in case they need to issue a refund. Once they discover the scam, which will take less than a week, they won’t hand over any of the money.

    • @Mnemnosyne@sh.itjust.works
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      41 year ago

      There’s probably a decent number of people that buy a game and don’t install it immediately. I often do this when something is on sale. By the time they realize they didn’t get what they were after, it may be outside the refund window.

  • @PoorYorick@lemmy.world
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    71 year ago

    Just noticed this with Last Epoch yesterday as well. There is a false store listing it at $60 usd.

    I was looking for a way to report it to Steam but couldn’t locate a method to do so.

  • DdCno1
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    51 year ago

    Given Steam’s refund policy, I really don’t get what the plan here was. It’s safe to assume that everyone who fell for this would immediately refund.

    • Deceptichum
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      51 year ago

      Not really, Steam will refund the buyers, ban the seller, and keep the developer fee they paid. Scammers will be down $100 and everyone else will go on like nothing happened.

  • Amanduh
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    21 year ago

    I mean steam is great at reacting to this stuff right? I doubt they just continue to allow these shenanigans

  • crossmr
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    11 year ago

    This is what Steam takes 30% for. Legitimate indie companies submit games and some jobsworth continually rejects it because of incredibly asinine trivial stuff like a word being out of place or literally made up stuff that isn’t even real meanwhile companies like this just carry on.

    Steam literally has a policy in place that once you pass approval, you can do whatever you want. Why even make them pass approval if they can immediately change it to something that violates their ‘standards’?