|
|
![]() |
||||||||||||||||||||
|
Best iTunes Movie Deals
|
Best iTunes Movie Deals, See All the Deals » |
Top deals |
New deals
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
![]() $29.99 5 hrs ago
| ![]() $4.99 8 hrs ago
| ![]() $12.99 8 hrs ago
| ![]() $69.99 | ![]() $4.99 8 hrs ago
| ![]() $4.99 8 hrs ago
| ![]() $9.99 8 hrs ago
| ![]() $4.99 8 hrs ago
| ![]() $4.99 8 hrs ago
| ![]() $7.99 17 hrs ago
| ![]() $4.99 8 hrs ago
| ![]() $4.99 8 hrs ago
|
![]() |
#1 |
Blu-ray Guru
|
![]()
So I have a couple hundred unused bluray digital codes and I was going to take them all out of the cases, list them, and start giving them away instead of letting them go to waste.
I notice that a lot of them have 'Expiration' or 'Guaranteed to Work by' dates on them. Some of them 'expired' by years. I've seen online that a lot of them are supposed to work even past those dates. Is this correct or nah? How do these expiration dates work? Anyone here have any experience claiming expired codes? Does it depend on the studio? Are any of the claim websites just dead? (I see Ultraviolet, Flixster, MovieRedeem, MoviesAnywhere, UPHE, etc in the codes I've checked) Don't want to waste all that time if 99% of them won't work. |
![]() |
|
|
![]() |
|
|