| I have mixed feelings about this. My gut feelings here are: 1. Randomness in general is fine. Magic: The Gathering packs or blind bags or Kinder Surprise eggs should not be banned[1]. Plenty of digital games do have random drops too. If I pay Blizzard $15 per month for WoW, I can kill a dragon once per week, which has a chance of dropping an item for me, which has a chance of being a cosmetic appearance I need to complete a set. But that's fine, I think. (Right?) 2. Loot boxes in digital games are...fine...ish? I don't think Overwatch is a huge problem. Some titles have done this in a way which is fine, but overall it does feel a bit scarier than the things in example 1. (Although it's not always clear how it differs from the WoW example...) 3. In some cases, we have figured out ways to weaponise this in very dangerous ways (eg, kompu gacha). If you then target children, which some do...it's not good. 4. This is a very effective monetization technique. But to put it another way, it's a way that developers can obtain the resources they need to make good content (and there are many F2P game which do have good content!) 5. ....but those resources come from whales, and while some of those are just wealthy individuals with eccentric hobbies, others are what we'd call in other contexts "problem gamblers". "I get a cool game for free because other people have gambling addictions" is not a good argument to be making! 6. I'm reflexively skeptical of the governments ability to regulate things like this well, because it's fast moving and highly technical. There is every incentive for a company who has perfected a new more effective technique for exploitative monetisation to push for a ban on the methods its competitor's use. Unintended side effects and regulatory capture are very real. So....I dunno. Some people are doing bad things, but I struggle to define it. We probably all have run across a mobile game doing pretty shady things, but does that mean all loot boxes should be banned? And would this law really help, on balance? [1]: Yes, I know Kinder Surprise eggs are banned in the US due to them being, allegedly, choking hazards. I don't think they should be, but at any rate, they shouldn't be banned because they contain a random toy. |
Compared to buying packs of Magic or Pokemon cards, where a couple cards in some sets are exponentially more desirable than any other card (and valued as such on the secondary market), loot boxes in many games aren't that different. Except there is physical/real friction/limits to buying a pack of cards as a kid- e.g. getting to the store, going to the store with a limited amount of cash, etc. Compared to a f2p game where, if access to IAP isn't restricted, there's essentially a limitless amount that can be spent on a credit card without the kid realizing the impact of doing so.
The gamer inside me hopes this could help get rid of a lot of the cookie cutter f2p games and possibly encourage more higher quality games to be developed that are bought upfront like old times.