![]() ![]() I will wait until official release of Cubase 11, maybe even a week after that, to be save. The f’ck’n grace period doesn’t apply here! You wait until Cubase 11 is officially released.« »If you say ‘grace period’ again, I will hit you brutally with my rhythm stick. »I heard people talking about a grace period? So I wait just shortly before it is released?« »Man, I already told you! I wanna be smart and save some money. But don’t open the eLicenser Software and use this code to update your license.« Just remember this code, write it down, pin it on your fridge. ✺fter buying the correct update, you will get an activation code. ✿ine, dude, that would be 'bout 40 bucks for you. ✺s I told you, I have Cubase 10 activated.« Look in the shop, the price depends on the version you already have activated.« »You buy the update that fits your current version. I am now looking for a particularly low priced way to get Cubase 11, maybe even later versions. »Hi Bawkeahrs (*)! I have a Cubase 10 license activated. Listen to this dialogue, I accidentally picked up at the barbershop earlier: Well, confusion lurks everywhere, so maybe a narrative will help. The grace period is only applicable for licenses that are already activated. All this has nothing to do with any grace period. What Cubase version you actually get depends on the time of the activation of the license update you bought. You buy a license update from your current version. In other words: You don’t buy a Cubase update license. Maybe it is misleading that Steinberg (understandably…) talks about a “Cubase 10.5 Update sale” when in fact they sell license updates from existing licenses to any other version in future at the time of the activation of your bought license update. They most often ask about and want to do something where the grace period is completely irrelevant. People confuse the grace period with something else.
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