Readers usually want one thing from a registration guide: a clean explanation of the process and a realistic view of where friction tends to appear.
A good registration guide should explain the broad sequence, point out the parts that usually create uncertainty and show the reader where to go next for more detailed context. It does not need to perform like a sales pitch.
This page follows that principle.
The opening step is usually simple enough. The more important question is whether the reader understands what follows, especially once verification, payment setup and device-specific use enter the picture.
Verification is often where a smooth headline meets the practical reality of account control. A useful guide should normalise that without pretending every market feels exactly the same.
UK, India, Kenya and Ontario readers may all arrive at the same brand, but their expectations and account habits are not identical. Country pages therefore provide the missing context that a broad registration guide cannot fully carry on its own.
Usually the payments page or your market page, depending on what part of the journey you care about most.
No. It gives the broad account view, while country pages add local context.