Vaux wrote:This is reward so that means it's a gift
And the game cost only 15$ (and we pay for the development, not for the game himself)
In fact just send by USPS, that's generally not controlled
I beg to differ via first hand experience. Finnish duty officers are keen to inspect any parcel. Shipping via USPS does not affect that.
If the boxed game is a gift and is not bought for a price, the duties and taxes will be based on the value of the product. This valuation is done by the customs officers. Most likely the officer will not ever agree that the value of the game is $0 plus $15 for shipment. It would be unheard of - they are not fools. If the item has not been for sale on the market to determine the price, they will most likely generate some random average retail price for a PC game. But please note that it will be up to the customs officers to determine some arbitrary value for the product if it does not come with an invoice. And invoices do not usually come with gifts...
But when a backer only has a receipt for their Kickstarter pledge payment through Amazon payments, it is hard to show any other reliable value for the physical product. Surely the value is not the same as the pledged value. To determine the duties and taxes, they will most likely open the package to see what the gift is and how much it is worth. If there is a letter stating congratulation for giving us $250 and here is your reward, you will have a hard time convincing the officer that it is just a gift and you have not paid anything. Albeit the mechanism truly is that we are just gifting our money to fund the game development, they will surely consider it to be an attempt of a tax fraud where the buying is masked by using the term donation. The duty officers have seen all the possible tricks to counter duty and tax payment. Since this is the first time these sorts of crowdsourcing things are happening, there are no precedents for them to understand this mechanism. And it is not clear if pledging will be acknowledged as "not buying" by the legal system in all countries ever. In the worst case, a backer will end up fighting through the legal system if they do not wish to pay the taxes for the full pledge amount or leave the parcel at the customs to be disposed of.
I want to make it clear that the above described is the sort of hassle I do not want the backers to be thinking of. These things should be clarified so that we can increase our pledges without worries. I suppose that this is not so big problem for $10k backers loaded with money and able to pay the taxes or let their lawyers do the worrying, but normal average backers struggling between, say, $30 and $50 tiers and money for food.
It will be much better for InExile to clearly acknowledge some value for the boxed game, to state that value clearly on the parcel, and also to include a corresponding invoice or some other sort of statement of value. Looking at the $30 and $50 reward tiers, the boxed game is "worth"/"has a value of" $20 despite it has no price as it cannot be bought. Certainly, I am not stating that they have to acknowledge that this is buying, but I am arguing that some value must be attached to the physical reward, and that value should not include the value of the digital rewards and should not be related to the pledged amount.
If the issue is not handled at all, I can just Imagine the negative publicity when some juicy stories of tax and duty faiths start to arise. The press would just love to find these sorts of problems with these successful projects and their eager backers.