Steam Sale 2018: all the best games and deals

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Those fine folks at Steam love a sale, and fortunately for us, they come around pretty regularly too, giving you a chance to pick up everything from indie darlings to AAA tentpoles at cheaper prices. Most recently we saw the Steam Summer Sale come and go, but it shouldn't be too long before another one arrives, if you missed out on that occasion. Besides the season sales, there's a continuing selection of weekly sales to pick from too. In this guide we'll keep you up right to date with the best deals and discounts currently available on the platform, and how to get the best out of the sales. These are the best mice you can buy for your PC How to get the best deals in the Steam Sales Whichever way you approach a particular Steam Sale, you're guaranteed to have the chance to pick up some top gaming titles at great prices.  Finding bargains isn't too difficult, but there are a few techniques and tricks that are worth using if you want to get the most out of t...

ZTE profit evaporates in revised results

ZTE has updated its financial results for the first quarter of 2018 in order to reflect the impact of a now-overturned ban from dealing with US companies.

The Chinese manufacturer originally published its Q1 results in April – around the same time it was working to overturn the seven-year penalty imposed by the US government.

ZTE revised results

It posted a 39 per cent increase from the 1.2 billion Yuan profit (£134m) it declared a year earlier, but said it was too early to tell what the impact from the ban would be. However it has now revised these figures to show a 5.4 billion Yuan (£603m) loss, a dramatic change.

Losses for the entire of the first half of 2018 are set to be to between 7 and 9 billion Yuan (£782m - £1bn), a far cry from the 2.3 billion Yuan (£257m) profit it recorded in 2017. This will take into the account the $1.4 billion (£1bn) it has had to pay to the US to continue trading with US suppliers.

But ZTE will be happy to be back in business having warned that its future was in jeopardy.

The ban was issued to ZTE for breaching a previous agreement for illegally shipping products to North Korea and Iran. ZTE was obliged to discipline executives involved in the scandal but failed to do so.

As part of a deal brokered by President Donald Trump, ZTE was required to change its management team, dismiss any employee at a senior vice president level or above and pay the US government a $1 billion fine for the ban to be overturned, with a further $400 million held in escrow.



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