You’re late, this event has expired already.
Watch the elements. The big one is temperature: in the Alpine environment, it can swing widely, so dress in layers. Start with a moisture-wicking base layer, move to a pick-your-favorite insulated mid-layer, and finish with an appropriately zipped, snapped, or buttoned outer windproof shell. Even though the event is in winter, you need sunscreen. A lot of it. Broad-spectrum SPF 30+. The surrounding peaks act like mirrors and reflect a lot of sun back down onto the spectators. The prime viewing areas in the lower part of the stadium fill fast, so ... arrive early. I can't stress that enough.
Once you're in, there's designated "fan zone" space with a lot of scene-setting commentary, pretty modest in terms of hype, but it gives some sense of what you're about to witness. If that's not enough (and it probably isn't), there's also the assurance of robust safety protocols to make the event just that more impressive. The park's hospitality — including comfortable heated rest areas, gourmet food kiosks offering regional specialties, and Wi‑Fi hotspots — guarantees that comfort and connectivity are not just afterthoughts.
Yet, for most of us, getting there is as much a part of the experience as anything that happens once we arrive. Accessibility to the park is aided by the town of Livigno itself being a mountain resort that welcomes a diverse clientele with a broad range of spending abilities. This sector has long catered to guests traveling via airplane, private vehicle, or the occasional tour bus. The nearest major airports are in Milan and Innsbruck, with shuttles running directly to Livigno. Vistas along the way could only be more exhilarating if they were rendered by a half-timbered cartoon Bavarian.
The road trips from either air hub are safe, easy, and filled with minor roadside attractions along the way, from the gauzy sight of the Stelvio Pass to the panorama of the Brenner Pass and down the Etschtal (the valley of the Adige River).
At Ticombo, we guarantee that every ticket we sell is a valid one. To ensure this, we use an extremely rigorous multi-layer authentication system that checks nearly every conceivable indicator of authenticity. If a ticket to an event is going to be sold by someone, they must pass our test first.
The first part of our multi-layer system is simple: we check the ticket. If the ticket is physically there, that's a good place to start, but of course a lot of faked tickets are accompanied by a lot of fake checking processes working to convince the ticket-buyer to hand over their cash. If we're not going to be fooled, the next layer is checking the doer: who issued the ticket? If it was you-know-who, it's time to run for the hills, but if it was an actual event organizer, it's time to de-stress and think about what you'll bring to wear in the cold.
The money you spend during your visit to Ticombo is safe. Every transaction is protected with premium encryption technology, and even after you click, we hold your funds in escrow until you've had a chance to confirm that the ticket you bought is for real and that it's in your hands. We also protect our sellers by doing all this without putting them on too much of a edge, and Ticombo keeps the bad guys out.
All tickets that Ticombo issues are transferable, but the platform serves a special niche within that marketplace. The Ticketing for Inclusion Company (Ticombo) allows for all the basic event-entry rights and privileges that any secondary seller would grant. But in this case, the seller is wholly trustworthy. That should count for something, and here's why: All the tickets that Ticombo offers come with a 100 percent guarantee. Should you buy one, you are assured that you will gain entry to the event for which the ticket has been issued. And should you have any trouble in the process, the Ticombo team — composed of ticketing experts and multilingual staff — stands ready to assist.
The secondary ticket market is influenced largely by the elasticity of supply and demand. When you buy tickets early, you typically find that there is a much larger inventory, that there is much better selection in terms of sort of different categories of seats, and far better prices because sellers are trying to offload that inventory before the event becomes a big deal, and therefore, a big demand.
As you get closer and closer to the event, the tickets become much scarcer, prices go up, and availability goes way down, and unfortunately, that kind of culminates in a situation where you're trying to buy the tickets and you're facing just in general upward pricing pressure and downward availability pressure.
That said, there probably are some times — don't quote me on this at face value — when sellers who are facing just downward pressure on the availability front might actually cut prices or offer sales or some sort of opportunity for you to get the tickets at the last minute.