Price isn’t the main criterion when buying a digital item. The cheapest listing often turns out the most problematic: an empty key, the wrong region, a dead account. Before we add a seller to the partner catalog, we run them through a simple checklist. The same 7 signs will serve you too — reading a listing takes under a minute.
1. Number of sales
The baseline trust indicator. Hundreds or thousands of sales on a specific item is a track record of fulfilled orders. A fresh listing with 0–2 sales isn’t necessarily bad, but check it more strictly against the other points.
2. Seller rating and reviews
Look not only at the overall percentage but at recent reviews: what buyers wrote over the last few weeks. One or two negatives across hundreds of sales is normal; a wall of “key never arrived” / “won’t activate” complaints is a stop signal. Negative reviews are more informative than glowing ones.
3. Automatic delivery
Auto-delivery (key/access arrives right after payment) is almost always better than manual. Manual delivery means waiting and depending on whether the seller is online. For cheap, high-demand items auto-delivery is practically a must.
4. Clear region and format
The description should clearly state the activation region (RU, Free, TR, KZ…) and the format — is it a key for your account, a shared no-GUARD account, a rental or top-up by ID? A vague “activates anywhere” with no details is reason for caution. On Steam formats — separate guides on accounts without GUARD and offline accounts.
5. Warranty
Serious sellers state a warranty period (e.g. “1-year warranty” on Steam accounts) and replacement terms. Having a warranty is a commitment to restore access if something breaks — not just marketing.
6. A sane price
If an item is suspiciously cheaper than the market, that’s more often a red flag than a steal. A very low price on a high-demand item usually means a questionable format (a shared account instead of a key), the wrong region, or a risk of access being revoked. Compare with neighboring listings in the same category.
7. Deal protection via the platform
The purchase goes through Plati / oplata.info — not “into DMs” and not a transfer “to a card.” The intermediary platform holds the money and gives you the right to a dispute. How it works and when refunds happen — in the guide on warranty and refunds.
How our catalog uses this
We don’t drag everything into the catalog: entries pass the same 7-point screen, and the links carry the ai=555188&_ow=0 marker — it doesn’t change the price for you, but it lets us track seller quality and drop the ones that draw complaints. If you hit a problem with an order — message us on Telegram or Discord, we’ll help with the dispute.
These are general guidelines. The final call is always yours — before paying, check the specific listing’s description and recent reviews.
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