Fri May 01, 2026 10:40 am
Negamuse wrote:Sold out by the time I got to the front of the queue (London). TBH didn't expect to get tickets though
You have to remember these things aren't designed to give fans an advance listen. They're designed to create "buzz", and in the mind of a marketer someone getting in is way riskier than ten people not getting in. Cos if someone gets in and hears the album and only kind of likes it, that's a problem. Ten people not getting in are CONVINCED that they're missing out on something awesome. Kinda cynical, but that's marketing!
Fri May 01, 2026 10:45 am
Negamuse wrote:TBH didn't expect to get tickets though
Fri May 01, 2026 10:49 am
Could you share your timing on clicking the link? Do you just click the ticket link in the email and then enter the code? I still have a few hours here in New York before it’s time.outhudd wrote:Negamuse wrote:TBH didn't expect to get tickets though
I had the same attitude.
Fri May 01, 2026 10:49 am
observation wrote:Wildfire wrote:What a shit show that was. Very disappointing.
The companies who run these online sales (and I don't mean Warp or BOC, I mean the 'delivery partners' or 'third party event management vendors') know for sure that certain events like Taylor Swift or Oasis or BOC will have exceptionally high demand. The first-come-first-served model just means that the company itself creates a massive DDOS on its own site.
It might be more fair (and easy to engineer I suspect) if your access code is time stamped when you first access the site. From a cursory search for 'Internet Time Resolution' :
"Precision Time Protocol (PTP): Used where higher precision is required, such as in financial trading or industrial automation, offering sub-microsecond or even nanosecond-level accuracy."
Now I do think that it is overkill to require us all to have access to satellites and a freaking time-machine to buy tickets for a show. However, if one makes big hype and bestows limited access to an event, give people a chance to take part fairly and hopefully use the tools we have to get access to something they feel is important to them. If there are any software engineers/network developers here, can you explain to an idiot (me) some of the factors that could improve situations like this?Even if a company "books" high Precision Time Protocol access for a few hours it might simplify or streamline the experience for users. At least people might know where they stand if they have a message saying 'your access is in 45 seconds' or '3 minutes' rather than just a 504 or 'this page is busy right now' message.
llydia wrote:I don't understand how I was meant to win that. It told me to join a fucking waiting list. It never even presented the option to purchase a ticket. Honestly, I am giving up. That was that. Oh well.
Fri May 01, 2026 10:51 am
The site was inaccessible for like 15min. Kept clicking the ticket link in the email. Refreshing didn't seem to work.Den wrote:Could you share your timing on clicking the link? Do you just click the ticket link in the email and then enter the code? I still have a few hours here in New York before it’s time.
Fri May 01, 2026 10:53 am
Fri May 01, 2026 10:54 am
Den wrote:Could you share your timing on clicking the link? Do you just click the ticket link in the email and then enter the code? I still have a few hours here in New York before it’s time.outhudd wrote:Negamuse wrote:TBH didn't expect to get tickets though
I had the same attitude.
Fri May 01, 2026 10:55 am
Negamuse wrote:Sold out by the time I got to the front of the queue (London). TBH didn't expect to get tickets though
You have to remember these things aren't designed to give fans an advance listen. They're designed to create "buzz", and in the mind of a marketer someone getting in is way riskier than ten people not getting in. Cos if someone gets in and hears the album and only kind of likes it, that's a problem. Ten people not getting in are CONVINCED that they're missing out on something awesome. Kinda cynical, but that's marketing!
Fri May 01, 2026 10:58 am
Den wrote:Could you share your timing on clicking the link? Do you just click the ticket link in the email and then enter the code? I still have a few hours here in New York before it’s time.outhudd wrote:Negamuse wrote:TBH didn't expect to get tickets though
I had the same attitude.
Fri May 01, 2026 11:01 am
outhudd wrote:Rikkiebags wrote:Gaaaah, was number 20 in the queue. Got to checkout and a Cloudflare timeout error.
Now 220 in the queue...
Pain.
For some reason I couldn't click 'Accept' on the cookies box for a while.
Fri May 01, 2026 11:02 am

Fri May 01, 2026 11:05 am
Fri May 01, 2026 11:08 am
llydia wrote:I was queue position 1 to Glasgow, even took a screenshot.
and when I got there. No option to purchase after I put in my code, just be added to waiting list. Refreshed. Immediately sold out. I nearly threw my PC out the window. I swear to god something fucked up. I am just going to let it go now. Its really driving me crazy.
Fri May 01, 2026 11:08 am
Wildfire wrote:losador wrote:Wildfire wrote:I was on the nose at 11am for Glasgow, straight to a "page not available" page for about 30 refreshes, then eventually taken into the ticket site to tell me it was sold out. I could not have done that better and still a total waste of time and technical shit show. First time in my life I've been physically angry at anything BOC have done!
Unfortunately this is the way of things in the current internet era. No one it seems has come up with a proper way to circumnavigate technical issues, bots and the like. We need something in general to make the high demand events fairer and clearer for people but can't blame BoC for that, this is an issue across the whole live event world!
I'm blaming BOC for knowingly dispersing the live event tickets on a platform prone to crashes and f**k ups. A far fairer way would have been entering your code into a raffle then it being announced at a specific time. This has created a lot of bad feels for the community as you can see.
Fri May 01, 2026 11:12 am
observation wrote:Negamuse wrote:Sold out by the time I got to the front of the queue (London). TBH didn't expect to get tickets though
You have to remember these things aren't designed to give fans an advance listen. They're designed to create "buzz", and in the mind of a marketer someone getting in is way riskier than ten people not getting in. Cos if someone gets in and hears the album and only kind of likes it, that's a problem. Ten people not getting in are CONVINCED that they're missing out on something awesome. Kinda cynical, but that's marketing!
That's a very good point. Sadly.
Fri May 01, 2026 11:12 am
llydia wrote:I was queue position 1 to Glasgow, even took a screenshot.
Fri May 01, 2026 11:12 am
Mexicola wrote:If it makes you feel better, my queue position also went rapidly down to 1, but I suspect that was more to do with people getting booted off when the tickets sold out. Ie. You made the front...but already sold out (I think).
Fri May 01, 2026 11:15 am
Sherbet Head wrote:observation wrote:Wildfire wrote:What a shit show that was. Very disappointing.
The companies who run these online sales (and I don't mean Warp or BOC, I mean the 'delivery partners' or 'third party event management vendors') know for sure that certain events like Taylor Swift or Oasis or BOC will have exceptionally high demand. The first-come-first-served model just means that the company itself creates a massive DDOS on its own site.
It might be more fair (and easy to engineer I suspect) if your access code is time stamped when you first access the site. From a cursory search for 'Internet Time Resolution' :
"Precision Time Protocol (PTP): Used where higher precision is required, such as in financial trading or industrial automation, offering sub-microsecond or even nanosecond-level accuracy."
Now I do think that it is overkill to require us all to have access to satellites and a freaking time-machine to buy tickets for a show. However, if one makes big hype and bestows limited access to an event, give people a chance to take part fairly and hopefully use the tools we have to get access to something they feel is important to them. If there are any software engineers/network developers here, can you explain to an idiot (me) some of the factors that could improve situations like this?Even if a company "books" high Precision Time Protocol access for a few hours it might simplify or streamline the experience for users. At least people might know where they stand if they have a message saying 'your access is in 45 seconds' or '3 minutes' rather than just a 504 or 'this page is busy right now' message.
This seems like a good solution, but surely you aren't the first to think of this? Makes me wonder if there must be a significant drawback is to implementing such a system.llydia wrote:I don't understand how I was meant to win that. It told me to join a fucking waiting list. It never even presented the option to purchase a ticket. Honestly, I am giving up. That was that. Oh well.
Yeah. I'm struggling to grasp the relevance of 'Register for First Access'. What did we get first access to, exactly?
Fri May 01, 2026 11:16 am
Fri May 01, 2026 11:26 am