

In reply to customer complaints, Ubisoft has been advising customers to contact the sellers, indicating that these sellers may have either sold stolen keys or had their banks reverse the charge for the keys in the first place. Ubisoft didn't give any warning or indication that it was planning to do this, most of this news comes in the way of angry forum and Reddit posts. Just like you I also want to keep all my games in Steam unless Steam doesn't have them.Ubisoft is cracking down on cheap CD keys bought from sites like G2A and Kinguin by revoking copies of Far Cry 4 from UPlay accounts. I seriously gotta ask, why the ♥♥♥♥ are you so mad? Chill the ♥♥♥♥ out.Īnd in case some of you idiots didn't know, you CAN activate certain Origin games on Steam.ĭon't worry OP. It just makes zero sense to phase them out once they bacame reliable.

I would bet my life that they don't disappear.

They were faulty, glitchy (just like Steam was on start), but they are decent now. Steam is just a place where you buy games, but Uplay is primary DRM for Ubi games and that's how it is.īoth Uplay and Origin have become strong and estabilished services. You have two choices - accept Uplay (not a bad service either, unless you like ♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥ about everything) or quit playing their games. Noones give a ♥♥♥♥ about you not liking Uplay. Ubi treat Steam like distribution channel. :) Oho, another person who has no clue about marketing and doesn't use common sense. I don't use uPlay for anything, nor do I want to. Originally posted by The KillSmith:The real issue for me is that my entire collection is on Steam, and that's the client I use everywhere I go. It's amazing to me that people have trouble answering questions without insulting others for having asked them, especially when the question had already been answered. I didn't make the statement that I wouldn't play any Ubisoft games because of uPlay, did I? It's like you're reacting to an entirely different post here. especially when I'm not forcing them down others' throats, but rather just clarifying the intent of not pursuing another method described above. The strategy behind uPlay doesn't confuse me if that's what you're trying to insinuate, but that doesn't preclude me from having my own opinions as a consumer either. I assumed I would get the obvious answer, but I just wanted to confirm which is why I asked. I have a little bit of "a clue" about Marketing as I've been working in that field for 15 years, and I'd like to think I have a bit of common sense here and there at the best of times. They don't call it a "uPlay key" within the application, only an Activation Key. Where have I been? Well, not playing Ubisoft games actually, which would explain why I haven't run into this question until now.
