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by anon_cow1111
692 days ago
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WoW only charges the base monthly subscription fee for 90% of the game, you don't actually buy the game+old expansions. The very newest expansion costs something, which could be tricky to fit into the law criteria, but everything else is included with the monthly bill. For GW2, any new regulations would apply normally because you bought a product(the game), not a service(a subscription). So yeah, they'd have to let you host a sever when they shut official servers down. Completely free games don't apply because... they're free. You have not entered into a legal contract with the publisher because no money was exchanged. They're not obligated to keep supporting a free product. If you thought the wording on the petitions is confusing, you might want to tell the guy behind it directly. ( rosswscott at google's mail service). It was actually revised by... probably many people and some things may have been lost in repeated edits. (I can find a list of games that have been killed off. I'll have to reply to this later because I saw it linked in a video and I can't remember which one it was) |
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> For GW2, any new regulations would apply normally because you bought a product(the game), not a service(a subscription). So yeah, they'd have to let you host a sever when they shut official servers down.
That distinction doesn't really make sense. If your argument is to stop killing games, why do games like WoW get an exception? You still are loosing access to something you paid for, before you ever put in your credit card for a subscription. It's irrelevant how they bundle expansions or make some free later, if you were subscribed from the beginning you bought a lot of expansions and the base game.
To be clear here, I think its fine that GW2, Wow, and any online only game could shut down and you loose access to it. As a consumer you should well understand that some things are online only, it is built to be online and if the servers shut down you should understand that. If somehow we can make an exception that WoW is fine, clearly consumers understand online only games regardless of how it was paid for.
Not talking about phoning home, but an actual online game.
I just don't understand how you justify the distinction of how some online games are somehow different from others. It weakens the entire argument to carve out exceptions that have no basis on the underlying technology on why something isn't realistic.
> If you thought the wording on the petitions is confusing, you might want to tell the guy behind it directly.
It is less that it is confusing, my point is that is conflating 2 very different things.
Phoning home, and truly online games.
The reason I responded to you is you started your first post seemingly from a place of authority or understanding of this:
> OK as usual there's a ton of misunderstanding on this issue so I feel the need to summarize it:
That implies that you know something that we don't, further enforced by you mentioning things in your original post that is nowhere to be found in this petition.
If that is not the case and your original post was your own understanding of what is written but not from a place of having any additional information than that makes this conversation very different.