Posts: 290
Joined: 10/4/2011 From: New Zealand Status: offline
I haven't bought games from Matrix for a while because of this.
I would like to buy all my Matrix published games through Matrix to support you and to have the DRM free versions. However, all the Matrix games are much more expensive on here than on Steam.
Take Waterloo for example, buying on this on Steam costs NZ$ 53.99, buying directly from Matrix costs NZ$ 73.85. That is a whopping difference of NZ$ 19.86.
I cannot fathom why I'm being punished by wanting to buy through Matrix games directly. This has stopped me buying your games. I want to buy them but don't want the Steam versions, I want the DRM free versions.
Re: Tax on Download Only Games Postby IainMcNeil » 25 Nov 2015 10:17
Hi guys,
tax has to be charged but some time ago we decided to pay it out of the revenue, not add it on top. The price you see should be the price you pay and if not something has broken at Bluesnap and we'll find out what. We've tested it a number of times here and we see no taxes added. You will pay tax, but its out of the $49.99 price, not added on top of it, so we effectively pay the tax for you.
Posts: 290
Joined: 10/4/2011 From: New Zealand Status: offline
Thanks Zakblood, but there has always been an issue, it is just very bad now. Also, this is not Bluesnap adding tax, it is the price shown on the Matrix website.
Normally it was $7 to $10 difference between Steam and Matrix and they said that they work the exchange rate differently. However, it is getting so bad that I won't be able to buy games from here anymore. If it is not an error, then they need to re-think how they calculate it or move away from Bluesnap. This issue is at least driving away one customer.
I recently got a 35% voucher from Matrix for being with them for 3 years, the voucher is useless because of these massive price discrepancy.
send a message to staff / support or Ian, they will get back to you with a better answer than i can give, then you will know for sure what the problem is, as there must be one
Posts: 290
Joined: 10/4/2011 From: New Zealand Status: offline
Good idea, I will send something through to support. Just to show, see attached for 3 games I'm keen to buy, but the price difference is just ridiculous.
No luck. They claim it's related to exchange rates, go figure. Both Matrix and Steam are listed in euro for me: Matrix: € 44.99 Steam: € 41.39
So the explanation given below just doesn't make any sense. I only see euro prices (makes sense to me), so if anyone could confirm the price in dollars is indeed the same on matrix & steam that would be great. Even then, exchange rate impact should not be this significant, unless someone is ripping off someone.
Helpdesk reply: The discount is matched between our store and Steam store. On Steam the discount price is $44.99 the same in our store $44.99. The issue is that the Steam store have local currencies in their store, which sometimes are better or worse than real currency conversions.
EDIT: have asked whether I could get a matrix key if I buy via steam. Guess that would be a win-win.
< Message edited by BoldRover -- 11/26/2015 7:29:46 AM >
That difference is USD 3.38 (rounded to nearest cent). I imagine Steam/Valve can get better exchange rates because they are a huge company with $$$$ profits and use a different financial controller to Matrix. I suspect no-one at Matrix or Valve is making money out of you, its probably a fat banker somewhere. I personally wouldn't not buy at a certain source because of such a minor difference, especially if I liked Matrix and wanted to support them.
"Exchange rates difference" could well be the truth in this case. The person probably isn't referring to international rates but the rates they are given by their finance partner.
Very much doubt you'll get a Matrix key via a Steam purchase but you may get lucky.
Posts: 2804
Joined: 10/26/2004 From: London Status: offline
Its nothing to do with Steams size, its because Steam don't use a real exchange rate. They manually set prices in every territory and manually change when they decide to. Sometimes its higher, sometimes lower and we have no control over it as they use their own arbitrary values not based on exchange rates. All their games are region locked so when you buy in a country you can't resell it in another country. This prevents people playing the system. We don't force people to set up accounts verify credits cards etc to prove their location before they buy so don't have the ability to do this and to be honest don't want to - we don't think its fair that people in different countries pay different prices.
We only set the price in US$ and we use real exchange rates that change by day for all other currencies. We think that's the fairest way to do it but this is not something that everyone can ever agree on, as everyone obviously wants what is best personally for them :)
You can configure Steam not to run at startup. This way it will only run when you are playing a Steam game.
I prefer Matrix's serial DRM. It doesn't require an internet connection to play. You can also get a Steam key with your Matrix purchase should you prefer that service. And if both companies were to go out of business today (God forbid) I could still play all of my Matrix games.
Steam running while you play your game still takes up PC resources however. SoW being a pretty demanding game due to all the AI calculations that's not a good thing. Personally I'd buy the Matrix version.
Posts: 290
Joined: 10/4/2011 From: New Zealand Status: offline
Yeah, I was told by support what Iain said above. NZ$ 20 dollar difference is massive, at current exchange according to Google, it comes at US$ 13.15. I'm not just flushing extra money down the toilet to support Matrix directly.
Oh well, I'll wait for the prices to be at least similar before buying something from here again. However long that takes.
< Message edited by JiminyJickers -- 11/27/2015 3:40:50 AM >
Your post seems to imply Matrix are ripping you off. It seems they are not and are using the correct exchange rate. It's Valve/Steam who have pitched the game price artificially low in NZD. So just buy from there and get a bargain, unless you really don't like Steam.
Posts: 290
Joined: 10/4/2011 From: New Zealand Status: offline
quote:
ORIGINAL: Mr Digby
Your post seems to imply Matrix are ripping you off. It seems they are not and are using the correct exchange rate. It's Valve/Steam who have pitched the game price artificially low in NZD. So just buy from there and get a bargain, unless you really don't like Steam.
Initially that was indeed what I thought. But since it has been explained by Iain and support, I understand their position.
In my previous post, I'm just letting them know, from one customers perception, it looks really bad to have the same game from the same developer and publisher sold on a 3rd party store for a significantly cheaper amount.
I would have expected to get the best deal directly from Matrix. But I understand Steam/Valve is much larger and have much more money to obviously take the exchange rate variations under it's belt.
All good, I understand it now and will just wait for prices to change. I use Steam and buy plenty of games on there, but I always buy DRM free from the Developers/Publishers if there is a choice.
< Message edited by JiminyJickers -- 11/27/2015 11:06:15 PM >