Wednesday, November 22nd 2023
Steam Switches to the US Dollar for its Turkiye and Argentina Stores
Valve Software today announced that the Steam store will switch to the US Dollar as currency for Turkiye and Argentina. The stores for both countries have implemented this change as of November 20. The reason cited for the change is the high degree of volatility of the local currencies in the two markets, which is causing game developers to struggle to find the right pricing for their games. Gamers from other regions have been using VPNs to shop from these countries as the volatile exchange rates would mean low pricing. Those with Steam Wallet balances in the local currencies from these two markets will see their wallet balances convert to US Dollars at the day's exchange rate.
Source:
Steam Support
36 Comments on Steam Switches to the US Dollar for its Turkiye and Argentina Stores
Anyways, chilean steam store meta, coming up!
I thought the government had demanded all foreign currency held by citizens?
Specially as we just today got a 35% hike in our exchange rate
Turkey inflation rate 61%
Sure, blame Steam.
As i've said, i don't see steam selling much after the 20th, too bad they don't really publish sales data per region It is actually their problem if they want to operate in those countries.
piracy will once again skyrocket, even if it's a PITA to make multiplayer and patches work
so again, no, steam should keep our super cheap regional pricing, i hope they don't complain about piracy afterwards...
Thank you for the games tax, Gaben.
Either way, my sympathy to the gamers on the ground. That's who looses when bozos run things into the ground (amongst everyone else).
We can't pay full price for games, and now EA charges 70 bucks for their unfinished trash.
You can ignore Steam -not like gaben is coming up with "taxes"- but that's kinda one of the first symptoms you're on your way to becoming a fourth world bananastic hellhole, worthless currency not being accepted, well, anywhere... the respective governments could and will try to apply copium measures such as limiting access or straight banning access to foreign currency, but in the end it'll be useless, I mean, it's a crime in my country to use US currency as legal tender for all debts public and private yet pretty much everyone uses it, de facto, cash only though, only downside is you can't pay with 50s or 100s unless you're actually spending that much on goods ($50 can get you a LOT), but since prices are low when you deal in USD the most used notes are 1, 5 and 10, rarely a 20 if it's for stuff like groceries or my favourite, electronic components, like, most prices are in cents unless rare specialised parts... it's a matter of convenience, a single note vs a whole backpack full of monopoly papers that acccount for the same value... it's just not worth it, literally.
Ah but it gets worse eventually, you let it snowball and you end up with so much restrictions you can't have access to cards with international purchase power, like me, reason I can't legally get any games from these platforms, sure they offer some free games but that's all I have access to, got some nice ones from Epic... GTA V, Dying Light, The Evil Within (one of my favourite games ever), Payday 2 tho I've never played it (not into multiplayer stuff), Death Stranding Director's Cut, Wolfenstein... those are nice, from Steam I got Half-Life, not much but it's a start right? hope they release more free games soon.