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Ticket tips and Tricks for 2025 festival


Crazyfool01

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31 minutes ago, El Scorcho said:

Anyone waiting on the email, if you log into your SeeTickets account (if you have one) and click on orders, then import orders, you will be able to see Glastonbury 2025 It's not the email but it offers some reassurance.

Thank you, just done this 👍

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1 hour ago, Crazyfool01 said:

Festival cancels these it sends the message out and means the resale pot is bumped up nicely … although don’t think they will sadly 

Never going to happen. All the tickets sold out. Any cancellations would just be bad publicity so it will just be quietly forgotten about and maybe they'll work on making things more secure for next time.

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48 minutes ago, Nobody Interesting said:

Maybe it needs as many as possible to, once the contact page is up and running again, report this to them.

Correct, the more reports  they get whether or not you were successful the more chance it will be taken seriously. 
Reckon we were extremely lucky. My pc on Wi-Fi got stuck on two bars and never moved from there,whilst the I pad liked to my phone progressed steadily through the bars and secured tickets. 

Edited by Ayrshire Chris
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Depressing to see bots and tech touts hoovering up tickets yet again. I’d like to think the festival/see will be looking at how to reduce this but not getting my hopes up given how this has been an ongoing issue for a while now.

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3 minutes ago, Lubic said:

Depressing to see bots and tech touts hoovering up tickets yet again. I’d like to think the festival/see will be looking at how to reduce this but not getting my hopes up given how this has been an ongoing issue for a while now.

I think the Queue-IT implementation has actually made it easier as well. 

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4 minutes ago, Lubic said:

Depressing to see bots and tech touts hoovering up tickets yet again. I’d like to think the festival/see will be looking at how to reduce this but not getting my hopes up given how this has been an ongoing issue for a while now.

To what extent, if any, is this likely to change the demographic?

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Just now, Skip997 said:

To what extent, if any, is this likely to change the demographic?

The pool of festival goers is only so big … each year some new join and some old call it a day . This year it probably means that it has shifted slightly more than normal but even last year and years previously the hack would have been letting in those that were not it savvy … so maybe the odd % on to that but don’t expect a noticeable difference myself 

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Unfortunately part of the disappointed brigade today. In a group of 42 of us (7 groups of 6) only a single person got through and managed to get tickets for their group. Barely anyone else got above 3 bars.

 

I think on paper the new queueing system is fairer, but they really need to find a way to make it a level playing field. Has to be something they can implement which puts a stop to bots, multiple queue IDs etc, so each honest registered punter has a fair crack.

 

Unfortunately I’m not sure if there’ll ever be a water-tight method which prevents techy workarounds.

 

Big congrats to those who got tickets fair and square - hope to have more luck in April 🤞

 

 

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7 minutes ago, Skip997 said:

To what extent, if any, is this likely to change the demographic?

It’s difficult to tell. But for example, if people have been paying an extra £500 for someone to ‘guarantee’ their ticket using a bot, that already prices out a lot of people. And I don’t know the costs associated so just using that as an example but it generally means people with more money will buy up the tickets using an unfair advantage that is not accessible to everyone. It might not be loads as I don’t know the exact numbers involved. 

Edited by ads1980
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3 minutes ago, ads1980 said:

I think the Queue-IT implementation has actually made it easier as well. 

 

Dramatically so.

 

Not going to go into details, but while the previous system could never be described as "bot-proof" (just as no system really can) - the fact that it could be so inconsistent, error occasionally, or just fall over did mean that anyone trying to connect to it had to somewhat babysit their connections. It created a kind of protection in itself.

 

New system makes it far easier to do all kinds of things that people would consider unfair, and to do so from a few different angles. And in terms of bots specifically, in the true sense of the word - to do so far cheaper and quicker than most people reading this would have expected.

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2 hours ago, gsp8181 said:

The bot detection is only running after the queue so it’s not flagging stuff like that


It’s definitely working before that, I got flagged on one connection joining the waiting room

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1 minute ago, ads1980 said:

It’s difficult to tell. But for example, if people have been paying an extra £500 for someone to ‘guarantee’ their ticket using a bot, that already prices out a lot of people. And I don’t know the costs associated so just using that as an example but it generally means people with more money will buy up the tickets using an unfair advantage that is not accessible to everyone. 

It’s already beyond my comprehension how people afford it even without paying someone to guarantee them a ticket.

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3 minutes ago, incident said:

 

Dramatically so.

 

Not going to go into details, but while the previous system could never be described as "bot-proof" (just as no system really can) - the fact that it could be so inconsistent, error occasionally, or just fall over did mean that anyone trying to connect to it had to somewhat babysit their connections. It created a kind of protection in itself.

 

New system makes it far easier to do all kinds of things that people would consider unfair, and to do so from a few different angles. And in terms of bots specifically, in the true sense of the word - to do so far cheaper and quicker than most people reading this would have expected.

Yeah, I don’t know the details involved but I imagine hammering a queue from a hell of a lot of unique requests almost guarantees you’ll force some through enough to then be able to ensure you have a lot with a good queue position. 
like you say, when hammering seetickets previously, it would just crash, timeout,

proceed - Who knew what would happen. But you never had a real indication where you were when you were hammering F5. 

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1 hour ago, Crazyfool01 said:

Agree … 

 

26 minutes ago, Ayrshire Chris said:

Correct, the more reports  they get whether or not you were successful the more chance it will be taken seriously. 
Reckon we were extremely lucky. My pc on Wi-Fi got stuck on two bars and never moved from there,whilst the I pad liked to my phone progressed steadily through the bars and secured tickets. 

The contact page is open and they already have my contact message

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