Use the normal methods for purchasing from Origin Mexico. Instructions are here if you need them: http://www.hotukdeals.com/deals/titanfall-pc-23-62-through-mexican-origin-1829612
UK sale price is £11.99 so it shows just how much we get ripped off tbh.
Your New Adventure Begins.
When the sky opens up and rains down chaos, the world needs heroes. Become the savior of Thedas in Dragon Age: Inquisition. You are the Inquisitor, tasked with saving the world from itself. But the road ahead is paved with difficult decisions. Thedas is a land of strife. Factions constantly war with each other even as a larger demonic invasion has begun. And you? You and your band of champions are the only ones who can hold it together. It’s your job to lead them… or fall.
Enthralling, Choice-driven Narrative – You’re not just deciding who to send into which battle in Inquisition, you’re making important decisions that shape the future of Thedas. Each choice carries weight, and your actions can lead to a variety of outcomes. Inquisition is a highly personalized journey, where one wrong move could set in motion a series of events that alter the physical aspects of the world itself, making your Thedas – and your heroes – feel truly unique.
A Massive World to Discover – The world of Thedas has never been bigger or more detailed; it’s wide open, and ripe for exploration. Discover enemy keeps ripe for the taking. Unearth hidden caves filled with lurking creatures. Thedas is vast and dangerous, but uncovering its secrets can spell the difference between victory and defeat.
Intense, Strategic Combat – There’s no wrong way to play Dragon Age: Inquisition… except for the way that gets you killed. Fortunately, the optional strategic view gives you a god’s-eye vantage on battle. Time stops while you plan in this view, but if that’s not your style, you can just barrel ahead, crossbows blazing.
Top comments
Ashe
20 Dec 1510#1
Try comparing their average monthly wage of $412 if you want to claim we're getting ripped off here. We're lucky to be able to pay their prices when they can't get paid our wages.
Still a hot deal, just countering any 'rip-off prices' vibe.
Latest comments (23)
jazferbetay
29 Dec 15#23
Thanks got the game of the year edition. I just used my paypal account from uk after I signed in and it worked.
DARKSABER
25 Dec 15#22
So what's the problem exactly ? You bought it from a third world country just like any one else with some nouse including myself using a growing number of third party online retailers.
IF the majority of public are silly enough to get ripped off by STEAM pre-release prices then let them get on with it i say.
Gaming has became a lot cheaper now that company's like CD KEYS and others have shown up ,so there's not that much to complain about.
Spark
22 Dec 15#21
Well I tried it for a short while tonight. I did try it on the XB1 last year but never really got very far on it.
Firstly it looks gorgeous as this screenshot demonstrates:
But I think the controls are designed with controllers in mind rather than a KB+M. I'm struggling to even loot fallen enemies tbh.
Peally
21 Dec 15#20
As a deal for the game, this is Hot - cheapest I've seen it by some way I think.
Personally, I've found this the most disappointing sequel to a game ever made though. Dragon Age Origins was one of the best RPGs ever made IMO - played through it at least a couple of times at 100+ hours a go. DA2 was not so great, but was playable. I've tried to get into DAI several times and have probably played a good 30-40 hours through it....but the whole thing just seems like a total sell out to me. It's gone all action RPG and abandoned its Bioware / strategy combat roots.
Still, given the reviews etc it seems I'm in the minority, so a good price if you think you'll enjoy it.
Jediben
21 Dec 151#17
I've just played an hour of it. I think the £5.37 price I did pay was too high.
Spark to Jediben
21 Dec 15#18
You can get your money back if you really want to. It's covered by the great game guarantee.
JME123 to Jediben
21 Dec 15#19
the first hour is quite slow. I completed it in 100 hours, it was amazing. just annoyed the new DLC was £15 to pay out again when I paid £50 for the game last year!
Spark
21 Dec 15#16
No, I completely understand your point but people in countries with large social welfare systems like this one pay for those systems via taxes. We also pay more for things which other nations, like America, get much cheaper such as car insurance, petrol, food, water, electricity etc. Even when you factor in the cost of private medical insurance for an American, things start to balance out.
The cost of games is entirely unrelated unfortunately. Americans have become very used to paying $60 and other smaller countries like Canada were pegged to that. We used to pay through the nose for them back in the SNES and N64 days and although it has become better over the last decade or so, there is still an expectation by publishers that we will be willing to pay more than other countries for the same product.
Jediben
21 Dec 151#15
I perceive the value of this game as exactly £0.00 (I have not played it yet and so cannot determine a monetary worth for this product). The publisher perceives it differently. I will use whatever means available to obtain it for a price as close to my perceived value as possible. That's called Capitalism.
Ashe
21 Dec 15#14
You are over-simplifying. Surely you must get that the economy is the sum of its parts? And you can't just take one bit out as if it should fit neatly into another? Hence my point about not being able to cherry-pick?
To get simpler, yes, one essential service being hugely more expensive probably does mean other less essential products in the market are priced cheaper...
Spark
21 Dec 15#13
So let me just get this straight, and again I'm absolutely not looking to flame anyone, but games cost more in this country because we have a nationalised medical care program?
I'm sorry but I just don't understand how that's possible.
Ashe
20 Dec 15#12
Other differences have been mentioned several times here. Health costs. Taxation. Public services. And I'm sure many other differences. The internet in America looks to cost twice as much as it does here.
Sure, I'd like to have our healthcare costs, our internet costs, Japan's internet speed, America's food costs, and pay tax levels of a lowly-taxed country, with the public services of a highly-taxed country. But we can't cherry-pick the bits we like and ignore the bits we don't. You said in a previous post that you'd be happy to pay the American prices plus VAT, but you didn't say whether you'd be happy to pay the large premiums of American health insurance.
Spark
20 Dec 15#11
Such as what other differences? I'm honestly not sure what those are and it seems like its all just to do with marketing and economies of scale to me.
Ashe
20 Dec 15#10
I'm not really sure what the point you're trying to make is. I'm not saying it's OK for people in Mexico to be earning less than us, or commenting on poverty there. All I'm saying is that whenever people do price comparisons between countries like Mexico, they often completely ignore that the average worker here earns far more. And that for comparisons between countries of similar economies, it's very easy to focus on the price difference of one product type without taking into account other differences.
Spark
20 Dec 15#9
I actually agree with the last idea, why should murderers and rapists get free food and healthcare while innocent people have to work for a living?
I've said this before, I'd have no problems paying the American prices plus VAT. I just don't like being ripped off.
ra786
20 Dec 15#8
I see what you're trying to say. But the problem is, if we begin comparing the cost of living to wages, and say that the reason it's cheaper in country A than B is because country A has a lower monthly income per capita than B, you then have the problem of the reverse being true. Which clearly is not the case. It's not OK for people in Mexico to be earning less in a month than people from other countries do in a week. That's poverty. And pricing very rarely works that way anyway.
DARKSABER
20 Dec 15#7
Well If you want American prices you can always go and live there and suffer like the rest of them , while i lived there i knew two women who where slowly dying because they could not afford there cancer medication because there health insurance company's had stabbed them in the back.
I also hope you have a large pile of money just in case you ever get into the most minor of legal problems other wise you will be guaranteed going to prison just like the other 2 + million yanks (highest prison population in the world) and be forced to work on slave wages which Mexican pay packets look lavish in contrast.
As another poster has mentioned the health insurance company's take a BIG slice out your pay check and will happily cut you off if they deem you too much of a financial burden.
Cheers dude. Wish I had thought about doing this method when I bought Battlefront yesterday instead of cdkeys.com
juicy442
20 Dec 15#4
Want goty really
Ashe
20 Dec 152#3
I'm comparing Mexico as this is a Mexico deal with a Mexico price comparison :smiley:
For other countries with a similar cost of living to us, some things will be cheaper, some things will be more expensive - just look at medical costs in the US as a huge difference between how both countries work.
Spark
20 Dec 152#2
You raise some good points there if you compare us to countries like Mexico but that doesn't explain why things are often much cheaper in countries like the US, Canada and Japan that have similar costs of living to us and often higher wages.
Even if you take VAT into account the numbers often just don't add up.
Ashe
20 Dec 1510#1
Try comparing their average monthly wage of $412 if you want to claim we're getting ripped off here. We're lucky to be able to pay their prices when they can't get paid our wages.
Still a hot deal, just countering any 'rip-off prices' vibe.
Opening post
$7.99 (~£5.37)
Use the normal methods for purchasing from Origin Mexico. Instructions are here if you need them: http://www.hotukdeals.com/deals/titanfall-pc-23-62-through-mexican-origin-1829612
UK sale price is £11.99 so it shows just how much we get ripped off tbh.
Your New Adventure Begins.
When the sky opens up and rains down chaos, the world needs heroes. Become the savior of Thedas in Dragon Age: Inquisition. You are the Inquisitor, tasked with saving the world from itself. But the road ahead is paved with difficult decisions. Thedas is a land of strife. Factions constantly war with each other even as a larger demonic invasion has begun. And you? You and your band of champions are the only ones who can hold it together. It’s your job to lead them… or fall.
Enthralling, Choice-driven Narrative – You’re not just deciding who to send into which battle in Inquisition, you’re making important decisions that shape the future of Thedas. Each choice carries weight, and your actions can lead to a variety of outcomes. Inquisition is a highly personalized journey, where one wrong move could set in motion a series of events that alter the physical aspects of the world itself, making your Thedas – and your heroes – feel truly unique.
A Massive World to Discover – The world of Thedas has never been bigger or more detailed; it’s wide open, and ripe for exploration. Discover enemy keeps ripe for the taking. Unearth hidden caves filled with lurking creatures. Thedas is vast and dangerous, but uncovering its secrets can spell the difference between victory and defeat.
Intense, Strategic Combat – There’s no wrong way to play Dragon Age: Inquisition… except for the way that gets you killed. Fortunately, the optional strategic view gives you a god’s-eye vantage on battle. Time stops while you plan in this view, but if that’s not your style, you can just barrel ahead, crossbows blazing.
Top comments
Still a hot deal, just countering any 'rip-off prices' vibe.
Latest comments (23)
IF the majority of public are silly enough to get ripped off by STEAM pre-release prices then let them get on with it i say.
Gaming has became a lot cheaper now that company's like CD KEYS and others have shown up ,so there's not that much to complain about.
Firstly it looks gorgeous as this screenshot demonstrates:
But I think the controls are designed with controllers in mind rather than a KB+M. I'm struggling to even loot fallen enemies tbh.
Personally, I've found this the most disappointing sequel to a game ever made though. Dragon Age Origins was one of the best RPGs ever made IMO - played through it at least a couple of times at 100+ hours a go. DA2 was not so great, but was playable. I've tried to get into DAI several times and have probably played a good 30-40 hours through it....but the whole thing just seems like a total sell out to me. It's gone all action RPG and abandoned its Bioware / strategy combat roots.
Still, given the reviews etc it seems I'm in the minority, so a good price if you think you'll enjoy it.
The cost of games is entirely unrelated unfortunately. Americans have become very used to paying $60 and other smaller countries like Canada were pegged to that. We used to pay through the nose for them back in the SNES and N64 days and although it has become better over the last decade or so, there is still an expectation by publishers that we will be willing to pay more than other countries for the same product.
To get simpler, yes, one essential service being hugely more expensive probably does mean other less essential products in the market are priced cheaper...
I'm sorry but I just don't understand how that's possible.
Sure, I'd like to have our healthcare costs, our internet costs, Japan's internet speed, America's food costs, and pay tax levels of a lowly-taxed country, with the public services of a highly-taxed country. But we can't cherry-pick the bits we like and ignore the bits we don't. You said in a previous post that you'd be happy to pay the American prices plus VAT, but you didn't say whether you'd be happy to pay the large premiums of American health insurance.
I've said this before, I'd have no problems paying the American prices plus VAT. I just don't like being ripped off.
I also hope you have a large pile of money just in case you ever get into the most minor of legal problems other wise you will be guaranteed going to prison just like the other 2 + million yanks (highest prison population in the world) and be forced to work on slave wages which Mexican pay packets look lavish in contrast.
As another poster has mentioned the health insurance company's take a BIG slice out your pay check and will happily cut you off if they deem you too much of a financial burden.
The US government's is even charging prisoners pay to stay.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-34705968
For other countries with a similar cost of living to us, some things will be cheaper, some things will be more expensive - just look at medical costs in the US as a huge difference between how both countries work.
Even if you take VAT into account the numbers often just don't add up.
Still a hot deal, just countering any 'rip-off prices' vibe.