It seems that you're using an outdated browser. Some things may not work as they should (or don't work at all).
We suggest you upgrade newer and better browser like: Chrome, Firefox, Internet Explorer or Opera

×
so, i have a cousin who lives across the country from me, (only see him once a year) i mentioned icewind dale and how it had multiplayer. my only question, is, with steam gifting, could i buy him a game, make it a gift, gift it to his account, open the gift on my computer with his account and burn it to a disc? he is super anal about downloading any file off the net. any one know if this would work?
With Steam? Yeah, I think you could do that, but he'd still have to DL the Steam client onto his machine and run it in order for his game to work. A heck of a lot easier for him to just DL the game as well, if he's going to DL the Steam client too.
avatar
Coelocanth: With Steam? Yeah, I think you could do that, but he'd still have to DL the Steam client onto his machine and run it in order for his game to work. A heck of a lot easier for him to just DL the game as well, if he's going to DL the Steam client too.
This. Though you do say it is "his account" so does he already have steam? If so, why would he worry about download something from there...?
Yes, it would work.

Just shut down Steam and zip / rar the folder that contains the game, then he can extract the contents to his Steam game folder and not have to download much of anything.

However, Icewind Dale isn't on Steam so I'm confused about what you want to do here.
Post edited December 18, 2011 by Foxhack
avatar
bVINCEd: so, i have a cousin who lives across the country from me, (only see him once a year) i mentioned icewind dale and how it had multiplayer. my only question, is, with steam gifting, could i buy him a game, make it a gift, gift it to his account, open the gift on my computer with his account and burn it to a disc? he is super anal about downloading any file off the net. any one know if this would work?
Since Icewind Dale isn't on Steam and it is better to have a GOG version anyway I would recommend you to make a GOG account for him and buy Icewind Dale from that account you will give him. Then you download Icewind Dale on your computer and burn it to disk. You should also burn the login info for the account, even though he will likely never use it.
whoa, sorry, my bad, i ment gog gifting, lol i feel like a fucking dumbass now, my bad
avatar
bVINCEd: whoa, sorry, my bad, i ment gog gifting, lol i feel like a fucking dumbass now, my bad
Ah, yes. Then you can just burn the files to disc and give it to him. He doesn't need to have any kind of client running to install or play a GOG game.
Technically you could. Not sure about the to-the-letter legality with regards to the EULA or buyer / member agreement. Just had a thread a couple days ago with a similar discussion.

The stupid thing is, if you download and subsequently burn to CD an installation executable packed with malware, it won't matter that it's on disk instead of straight from the 'net. Either way, he's relying on his AV software to catch the bad stuff.
avatar
HereForTheBeer: Technically you could. Not sure about the to-the-letter legality with regards to the EULA or buyer / member agreement. Just had a thread a couple days ago with a similar discussion.
If you think about this, then OP's situation is quite different. It is perfectly legal to buy a gift then use it to download the game, burn on CD/DVD then treating this as a present.
Post edited December 18, 2011 by Lexor
avatar
bVINCEd: he is super anal about downloading any file off the net. any one know if this would work?
I find this funny just because the file you send him will still have been downloaded. Oh well, if it's the only way you can get him the game then fair enough!
avatar
HereForTheBeer: Technically you could. Not sure about the to-the-letter legality with regards to the EULA or buyer / member agreement. Just had a thread a couple days ago with a similar discussion.
avatar
Lexor: If you think about this, then OP's situation is quite different. It is perfectly legal to buy a gift then use it to download the game, burn on CD/DVD then treating this as a present.
Seems that the person redeeming the gift code becomes the owner of the license, and the OP would need to be the one to redeem the gift code to accomplish the transfer to a disk. That would means he then owns the license and would not be able to give the game to his cousin. Where it becomes similar is that the OP either needs to:

A) have his cousin redeem the code, and the OP then logs onto the cousin's account to obtain the file for burning to a CD. In this case, two people are using the game license (even though the OP might never install it). This is the parallel to the other thread, logging into another's account to obtain the installer. Though only difference is the purpose for doing so.

B) use the gift code himself, which puts the game in the OPs account for future downloads, and then burn the installation file for the cousin. In this case, the cousin doesn't actually own the game license.

C) also buy the game, so both of them have the license and then its only a matter of sending a file. The OP didn't state whether or not he already owns the title. If he does, then I think it shouldn't be any problem whatsoever.

I'm not arguing against doing something like this to gift a friend; frankly, I think it's perfectly reasonable from a legal standpoint since the cousin gets the game and GOG gets the sale, so long as the OP doesn't keep a copy for himself without buying the license. The problem is that it's assumed that people will not do the right thing. Billions of individual sales annually should argue against that point, but that's where we find ourselves.

What's interesting to me is that the cousin is paranoid about downloading a file that at least several thousand have already done, and then worrying about what harm it will do, but has no problem giving out his login info.
Post edited December 18, 2011 by HereForTheBeer