By Jasmine Allday
Oasis are back in just a few hours’ time – and fans are still desperate to grab themselves some last minute tickets. Demand was unprecedented for the band’s reunion gigs, which will see Noel and Liam Gallagher on stage together for the first time in years. Fans have flocked to Principality Stadium in Cardiff already to be the first in line at Oasis’ reunion but those hoping to get last minute tickets have been warned that they need to be careful over ticket scammers. Oasis have enlisted Twickets as the official online resale partner and at the time of writing, there are no tickets available for tonight or tomorrow night’s gigs in Cardiff. Twickets has been used by many stars to allow for safe resale of unwanted tickets. Explaining their mantra, Twickets said: “Twickets is an ethical ticket resale marketplace, enabling users to sell spare tickets at the price they paid, or less. We have partnered with Oasis as their official ticket resale platform to protect fans from being ripped off by profiteering resale sites that encourage ticket touting. Sellers sell for free, and buyers pay a standard booking fee of 10-15% of the sold for ticket price. Buyers can purchase with all major debit / credit cards as well as PayPal.” Sites such as viagogo, Stubhub, and Vivid Seats allow fans to buy resale tickets from other fans. However, it is important to note that ticket conditions often prohibit resale after initial purchase. Those tickets may not be valid for admittance to gigs. Fans intending to buy tickets for live events through resale websites should check the ticket terms and conditions, to confirm whether resale is prohibited, before they buy. Ticket terms and conditions can be checked with the original seller, such as Ticketmaster or Live Nation. If resale is prohibited, tickets bought second-hand could be voided and admission to the event refused. Ahead of the event, Noel has spoken of why Oasis are so successful. “A new generation recognises how Oasis wasn’t manufactured. It was chaotic, and flawed, and not technically brilliant. We were rough and ready guys from a rehearsal room, and people recognised it,” he says in the tour programme. “I didn’t invent anything. I had good taste in music, a cool record collection, I could write a melody simple enough to make it work, and it was 50% inspiration and 50% copying.” Liam has also been speaking about the band ahead of the reunion. Asked what makes a great frontman, he said: “I mean being able to sing is good. Just getting on with your job and doing it, and trying to get a vibe going and looking cool.” Like this story? For more of the latest showbiz news and gossip, follow Mirror Celebs on TikTok , Snapchat , Instagram , Twitter , Facebook , YouTube and Threads .