You make a good point, don't get me wrong. It would be a shame if some original project with a lower budget ended up being put on indefinite hold in favor of paying the legal fees. However, it would be equally bad for EA to receive a "get out of jail free" card over this issue, and then think that it's okay to treat their customers like this by creating false pretenses for supporting their company. Not that I'm arguing your point, because the money to fight the lawsuit will come from somewhere that impacts the games people buy and not from the pocket of the deceptive bastards at the top with overfilling wallets.WhiteTigerShiro said:Not to be a downer, but I think everyone celebrating needs to pause to consider how businesses work. Fighting this lawsuit is going to cost money, and losing it will cost even more money. The executives are NOT going to take that hit, so they're going to pass it down the chain until eventually they cut funding for some game in development. Now, granted that I've been on my own little boycott against EA for a while now, but this still means that some potentially awesome game is going to get canceled in order to pay for the lawsuit.
None of the publishers really care about their customers a whole lot. EA is just the worst at acting like they do care.Jimijab said:What I have learned from this: EA are shits, they do not care about their customers.
Well yeah, it does rely on the EULA being, well, valid. Which it pretty much isn't. Perhaps the reason AT&T was able to enforce it is because they show the contracts before they have people sign, wheras games just have you agree right when you buy them without even looking at them.Chaos Inverse said:I'm not sure I get all this. So they could possibly get away with it if it's in the EULA right? But for console games, you can't see the EULA until you start the game or open it. So wouldn't that void the EULA since it isn't openly displayed or easily accessed by the consumer?
I believe it only applies to the Origin platform itself, and not the accounts. Maybe it does though, perhaps they changed the EULA recently. But if it does apply to Origin accounts as a whole, and they changed it without giving the customer a choice and then saying they automatically agree to the new EULA, then yeah, I'm pretty sure EA has no leg to stand on. I hope, anyway.LegendaryGamer0 said:All EA accounts are now Origin accounts, so it spans across all major platforms.
The problem is that the 'free' gift they put in as substitute wasn't free at all. It was early (not free) access to Battlefield 3 DLC, despite the fact PS3 users were going to get DLC access early anyway. So not only are they pulling a free item from their customers for no reason beyond 'because we want to', they're replacing it with something the customers still have to pay for. It's just an insult to people who bought their game in good faith.WaruTaru said:Not that I'm supporting EA, but how is it false advertising if the game was supposed to be "free"? Companies always reserved the right to "substitute free gift A for free gift B" all the time, don't they? There is something very wrong with this lawsuit on both sides.
Okay, you lost me there. Seeing as I refused to buy BF3, you'll have to walk me through that one. From your post, I'm guessing you actually have to pay to get the "early access", yes? Correct me if I'm wrong.DannyJBeckett said:The problem is that the 'free' gift they put in as substitute wasn't free at all. It was early (not free) access to Battlefield 3 DLC, despite the fact PS3 users were going to get DLC access early anyway. So not only are they pulling a free item from their customers for no reason beyond 'because we want to', they're replacing it with something the customers still have to pay for. It's just an insult to people who bought their game in good faith.WaruTaru said:Not that I'm supporting EA, but how is it false advertising if the game was supposed to be "free"? Companies always reserved the right to "substitute free gift A for free gift B" all the time, don't they? There is something very wrong with this lawsuit on both sides.
Correct, yes. 'Early access' only means that users of a particular platform (PS3, XBox 360, PC) get the ability to purchase DLC before others.WaruTaru said:Okay, you lost me there. Seeing as I refused to buy BF3, you'll have to walk me through that one. From your post, I'm guessing you actually have to pay to get the "early access", yes? Correct me if I'm wrong.
This is the first I'm hearing about getting Saint's Row 2 for free...how exactly do you 'claim' your copy? 'Cause I have the PS3 version of Saint's Row the Third.mjc0961 said:Good. This time, the lawsuit is quite justified, and I hope EA loses.
You see, THQ apparently pulled the same false promise thing with Saints Row The Third, but they corrected that by giving PS3 owners a free copy of the second game instead. Now that's compensation. Lose an exclusive game mode, get a full game (a full game that's bigger and better than Saints Row The Third mind you) free? That's how you apologize for a fuck-up, EA. Not by saying "you get to pay for DLC one week early" which they had already offered anyway.
So those poor souls who bought BF3 on PS3 was given the chance to pay for early access to spend money on DLC? Legal hurdles be damned, EA must go down one way or another.DannyJBeckett said:Correct, yes. 'Early access' only means that users of a particular platform (PS3, XBox 360, PC) get the ability to purchase DLC before others.WaruTaru said:Okay, you lost me there. Seeing as I refused to buy BF3, you'll have to walk me through that one. From your post, I'm guessing you actually have to pay to get the "early access", yes? Correct me if I'm wrong.
Quellist said:EA really have to lose this case or its going to set a very dangerous precedent.
Strazdas said:The law has only one rule. That who has the most money makes the rules. Welcome to america.fenrizz said:I am no expert on law, but does the law even allow EA to deny class action lawsuits?
No, what he did was say 'I wrote up this contract. If you want me to continue using your service, you have to agree to me.' Then he sent it by physical mail and waited four days before going all 'IMMA SUE YOU' because they didn't cut his service off.Niccolo said:One question: I remember a while ago some twit wrote up a EULA that said something like "By agreeing I now legally own your house" or some stupid shit like that... didn't the courts rules that EULAs were not legally binding?FoolKiller said:1. EULAs have been shown more than once to be full of holes in the justice system.sgtslacker said:When it comes to Origin (their crappy version of steam) then yes they have the right because it is included with their EULA. However it is actually pretty specific about what kind of lawsuit is not allowed. You can still sue EA if they release a game on Origin and no one in the world can play it because you know you paid for a product, however something like this false advertising thing they just did they could get away with.fenrizz said:I am no expert on law, but does the law even allow EA to deny class action lawsuits?
2. I actually question whether it is actually legal putting that in the EULA. There are many things that are put into contracts but cannot be held up in court. This seems like it could be one of them
They aren't contracts, they're agreements. There is no ironclad binding to it. To be a contract, the document must state what is offered in return.
I believe it does apply. I think. Pretty sure not even EA is that braindead to include only one platform when the technical "service"(and I use the term lightly) is embedded into every online-enabled game they have ever even touched, with some exceptions(one of which is Brutal Legend. Thank you EA for not fucking that up).Irridium said:I believe it only applies to the Origin platform itself, and not the accounts. Maybe it does though, perhaps they changed the EULA recently. But if it does apply to Origin accounts as a whole, and they changed it without giving the customer a choice and then saying they automatically agree to the new EULA, then yeah, I'm pretty sure EA has no leg to stand on. I hope, anyway.LegendaryGamer0 said:All EA accounts are now Origin accounts, so it spans across all major platforms.
My thoughts exactly. This isn't just spoiled gamers complaining. This is a company saying something that will increase the sales then retract that as soon as the game gets released. Clearly false advertising and sadly enough, it was probably effective too.tk1989 said:Makes sense. It is essentially false advertising, which last time I checked is kinda illegal
Well, the promised copy of Battlefield 1943 is not truly free. It's part of the purchase just like when you buy a soda pop you also get a cup.WaruTaru said:Not that I'm supporting EA, but how is it false advertising if the game was supposed to be "free"? Companies always reserved the right to "substitute free gift A for free gift B" all the time, don't they? There is something very wrong with this lawsuit on both sides.