Nainstalovat Steam
přihlásit se
|
jazyk
简体中文 (Zjednodušená čínština)
繁體中文 (Tradiční čínština)
日本語 (Japonština)
한국어 (Korejština)
ไทย (Thajština)
български (Bulharština)
Dansk (Dánština)
Deutsch (Němčina)
English (Angličtina)
Español-España (Evropská španělština)
Español-Latinoamérica (Latin. španělština)
Ελληνικά (Řečtina)
Français (Francouzština)
Italiano (Italština)
Bahasa Indonesia (Indonéština)
Magyar (Maďarština)
Nederlands (Nizozemština)
Norsk (Norština)
Polski (Polština)
Português (Evropská portugalština)
Português-Brasil (Brazilská portugalština)
Română (Rumunština)
Русский (Ruština)
Suomi (Finština)
Svenska (Švédština)
Türkçe (Turečtina)
Tiếng Việt (Vietnamština)
Українська (Ukrajinština)
Nahlásit problém s překladem
My Steam family → My son. Me. His mother who live in another town. My sister who live in another country.
But all of them had connected their account once on my PC.
After that it does not matter where the people in the family live as long as its the same store country.
My 5 other Steam Family members live all at other places, some hundreds of kilometers away from me.
Well I really don't understand then... I contacted Steam support about this issue 2 days ago, here is their answer:
I even proposed to send both ID or any requested document to prove we are brothers...
As a workaround you need to login to the same PC with your Steam accounts right after each other.
First the one being invited and then the one sending the invite. Log into Steam, wait a few minutes then switch to the other account and send out the invite.
It will now work because for Steam it shows you both logged in at the same location.
Once they are in the family it does not matter anymore from where they login to Steam as long as its the same country.
I would think that an adult would like their own independence and control over things instead of staying linked or shackled in to restrictions. It just make sense that the intended target of Steam Family would primarily be for children.