![]() I am not a Cubase user, but I would find it logical that the purchase date matters, not the license activation date. You can't have your cake and eat it, too. ![]() The price you pay for getting Cubase 11 at a discount is that you don't get a free update to Cubase 12. You don't also get the next version of that product of course, because the developer needs to make money to compensate for the development cost of the new version. If you buy a product during a sale, you get THAT version of the product. IK Multimedia always do aggressive sales of their products just before major paid updates. Native Instruments do their summer sales on Komplete just before they release a major new version of it that is then of course a paid update. And developers often do sales just before they release a paid update. The sale always ends before the eligibility period for a free update starts. That should be fairly understandable.Īll developers do this. Steinberg, like all developers, need to make money from their new releases that they invested a lot of work into, so of course they don't want a scenario where somebody buys the current version of Cubase at a huge discount and then gets the new version for free on top of that. So if you bought it during a summer sale, then you did not buy it after November 9th and you are not eligible for a free grace period update, is what I would assume. I remember posting about whether i should activate the cubase 11 pro i purchased in their summer saleI am not a Cubase user, but I would find it logical that the purchase date matters, not the license activation date.
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