WanzerPilot
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- May 23, 2022
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That is NOT what is being asked in this. No one is asking Publishers to throw money at servers for a few people. What IS being asked is that once they go offline with their servers that people who own the game have some possibility to be able to play a reasonable version of the game. (User hosted servers/Single Player Content/... | whatever is reasonable for a game in question)so the tldr is "I want publisher to keep server running for my 20yo online game me and half a dozen peoples still play today" kind of request ?
I mean, to be fair, games should all be playable offline, or with LAN alternative, asking to keep server running is a bit silly though.
You do realize what this is, right?Greetings Gentlemen, i wish to request your help (If you live in the EU) to sign the
European Citizens' Initiative for Stop Killing Games.
You've probably already seen this floating around a few YouTube videos at this point but we still need to reach 1 million signatures, and the dead line is next month.
While there are currently some misconceptions about the movement this video should clear them all up
You must be registered to see the links
TLDW: " "Stop Killing Games" is a consumer movement started to challenge the legality of publishers destroying video games they have sold to customers "
and here are the linksYou must be registered to see the linksYou must be registered to see the linksᴾˡᵘˢ ᶦᵗ ʷᵒᵘˡᵈ ᵇᵉ ᵖʳᵉᵗᵗʸ ᶠᵘⁿⁿʸ ᶦᶠ ʷᵉ ᵐᵃᵈᵉ ᶦᵗ ʳᵉᵃᶜʰ ¹ ᵐᶦˡˡᶦᵒⁿ ˢᶦᵍⁿᵃᵗᵘʳᵉˢ ᵃᶠᵗᵉʳ ᵗʰᵃᵗ ᵖᶦʳᵃᵗᵉᵍᵘʸ ᵐᵃᵈᵉ ᵃⁿ ᵃˢˢ ᵒᶠ ʰᶦᵐˢᵉˡᶠ
Don't buy games that require online connectivity? If people stopped buying then devs wouldn't be shoveling that shit.That is NOT what is being asked in this. No one is asking Publishers to throw money at servers for a few people. What IS being asked is that once they go offline with their servers that people who own the game have some possibility to be able to play a reasonable version of the game. (User hosted servers/Single Player Content/... | whatever is reasonable for a game in question)
Please support Consumer Rights!
"I am COMPELLED to buy, I just CAN'T STOP MYSELF"Don't buy games that require online connectivity? If people stopped buying then devs wouldn't be shoveling that shit.
Back when gamers had an ounce of self respect, xbox announced that it would require online connectivity to play games. The blowback they still haven't recovered from. If they did that today but released it with a golden sticker for an extra $20 if pre-ordered, it would sell like hotcakes."I am COMPELLED to buy, I just CAN'T STOP MYSELF"
"This game require an active Internet connection".What IS being asked is that once they go offline with their servers that people who own the game have some possibility to be able to play a reasonable version of the game.
Ah, the good old, "whatever is reasonable case by case", that famous legal sentence found in so many laws...(User hosted servers/Single Player Content/... | whatever is reasonable for a game in question)
The companies are doing their part by making it clear what the game requires, the gamers need to do their part by making sure they do the minimum amount of research into what they are spending their money on. If they can't be bothered to at the very least find out if a 1999 game can still run that's on them.It's about making things available to the customers who purchased them after EOL.
It doesn't help your case using example with absolutely NOTHING in common with the subject matter. Washing machines DO NOT come with a number of different license's attached to them from music to visuals to use of platforms....Most consumer goods do have EOL clauses - if you buy a washing machine and the company who made that washing machine went out of business, they shouldn't come to repo your washing machine, but nor should you expect to have them honor repair agreements outside of warranty.
This makes no sense, software is not like "other consumer goods" plus you are trying to pass ALL consumer goods off under one umbrella which is NOT the case. There are different categories because all consumer goods are NOT the same which is why they come with different warranties, licenses etc.And if your argument is - well - you're not really buying the game, you're only buying the license, making even your license useless in the event of a sunset, then YES, that's what this whole initiative is trying to argue against - the fact that gamers should be owning their purchases like any other consumer good.
People need to start taking responsibility for their own actions (or in this case lack of action). All this is doing is encouraging people to be more irresponsible and lazy.I'd rather individuals try something because "just don't buy it lmao" clearly isn't working since everyone is just continually getting GAPED more and more every year.
There are MANY options available to gamers, from private hosting to alternative services to offline cracks / mods etc. what's disingenuous is these are problems SOME gamers have created for themselves and are now expecting others to fix.Sign the initiative if you want. but to say "oh this will just kill games" is disingenuous.
And what after this? Make food manufacturers legally responsible if someone by a product after the "use-by" date?It's about making things available to the customers who purchased them after EOL.
There's protections in place. One can not sell a service that do not exist, and it's precisely what is happening when someone buy a video game requiring only access after its EoL.Because as it stands now there is very little to no protections in place (For video games at least) to cover this.
What is their choice, not something they have the legal obligation to do; beyond the "you can't sell..." I talked about above.things like enterprise level SaaS products in other industries have sensible End of Life policies that either allow you to migrate your data to another platform or have a minimum guarantee of access even post-sunset, like Salesforce.
No, they don't...Most consumer goods do have EOL clauses
There's no law regarding this, it's just called "common sense".- if you buy a washing machine and the company who made that washing machine went out of business, they shouldn't come to repo your washing machine,
Could it be because there's just no repair agreements outside of the warranty?but nor should you expect to have them honor repair agreements outside of warranty.
Well, if it's what the initiative is about, you should tell it to the guy who wrote the description of the said initiative, because he miserably failed at saying it.And if your argument is - well - you're not really buying the game, you're only buying the license, making even your license useless in the event of a sunset, then YES, that's what this whole initiative is trying to argue against - the fact that gamers should be owning their purchases like any other consumer good.
Not my fault if people tend to be more and more stupid with each new generation, in addition to lack the curiosity to learn what they don't know and verify what they think they know.I'd rather individuals try something because "just don't buy it lmao" clearly isn't working since everyone is just continually getting GAPED more and more every year.
Something need to be done, but it's not EU's responsibility to educate EU citizens.It's not going to be this rigid set in stone letter of the law "these are the EXACT THINGS WE WANT IN THIS EXACT WAY" because it's only initiative for the EU to LOOK at this and see if anything needs to be done.
You have full ownership over the connected TV (by example) you bought, but this do not imply that the service associated have to be eternal. And in the same way, you have full ownership over the software you bough, but this do not imply that the service associated have to be eternal.Especially with the insane push to digital only purchases where we lose inherent "ownership" of a physical good i think that we might need to rethink on how we think about this.
It isn't misguided, it's knowing what you talk about. Something that is clearly not your case.Sign the initiative if you want. but to say bluntly "oh this will just kill games" is misguided.
I have already conceded on it and will admit i was a bit impulsive and slapdash and didn't due my due diligence with my initial posting . i will take the L and move on.And what after this? Make food manufacturers legally responsible if someone by a product after the "use-by" date?
This is still an you problem. If an individual is dumb enough to buy something, whatever, requiring a subscription or an online access, without verifying first that the associated service is still running, it's his responsibility, and only his.
Note the use of the word "service". It's important, because you'll read it often and you should learn what it mean and imply before you try to defend an initiative that address it.
There's protections in place. One can not sell a service that do not exist, and it's precisely what is happening when someone buy a video game requiring only access after its EoL.
Therefore, what should be asked is for an enforcement of those laws, and for publishers (because this time it's their responsibility) to ensure that all unsold copies have been sent back to them the day they close the servers.
What is their choice, not something they have the legal obligation to do; beyond the "you can't sell..." I talked about above.
The only law set existing in EU for SaaS is theYou must be registered to see the links, but this regard their resilience against cyberattack and technical issues. They have the legal obligation to do their maximum to re-establish their service the faster possible in case of cyberattack or technical issues directly affecting them, and the obligation to have a "plan B" in order to switch their service in case of cyberattack or technical issues affecting one of their mandatory partners.
At no time do this address their End of Life practices, nor do this expect them to provide an alternative if they decide to stop their service.
No, they don't...
There's no law regarding this, it's just called "common sense".
Could it be because there's just no repair agreements outside of the warranty?
It's a pure rhetorical question, the answer is "yes, it's because of this".
This being said, it's funny how you consider normal that a company have no obligation to repair your washing machine outside of the period of warranty, and use this as argument to explain why video games studio should have obligation to provide a service that will continue to be usable outside of its period of life.
Not only those are two contradictory statements, but they also address two different elements; "good" for the first, and "service" for the second.
Well, if it's what the initiative is about, you should tell it to the guy who wrote the description of the said initiative, because he miserably failed at saying it.
But it's time to address the elephant in the room: your clear and constant confusion between "good" and "service".
Video games are "goods" in regard of platforms like Steam (and others); they are a product sold by those platforms.
The dependency to their "ownership control" service online is a borderline issue. European Justice Court have more than once addressed this, mostly on their rulings regarding the total legality of any resale of an "used" licenses.
If one of those platforms cease to operate, yeah, you would be in right to ask it for an alternative, some kind of local server mimicking theirs and telling the software that it can works.
But what you talk about in the thread opening, and what the initiative talk about, is not this, it's "services".
It's not about "hey, let me continue to use the software I own", but about, "hey, let me continue to access the content that the software I own permit me to access".
You can still use the game, it still launch, it still lead to the main menu page. What you can't do, is use this software to access a service that do not exist anymore. And this is absolutely not the same, both technically, logically and legally speaking.
In the same way that you can't sue your barber because it closed his shop, nor can you force him to provide an alternative, you can't sue a video game studio because he closed his servers, not can you force him to provide an alternative.
The software isn't the game and have never been the game. It's the vector used to access the service, that is the game. It's what you bought, a software providing you access to a service, and obviously this access is intended "as long as the service exist".
Not my fault if people tend to be more and more stupid with each new generation, in addition to lack the curiosity to learn what they don't know and verify what they think they know.
Something need to be done, but it's not EU's responsibility to educate EU citizens.
You have full ownership over the connected TV (by example) you bought, but this do not imply that the service associated have to be eternal. And in the same way, you have full ownership over the software you bough, but this do not imply that the service associated have to be eternal.
But, anyway, when you buy a video game on Steam (or others), there's no "physical good"...
It isn't misguided, it's knowing what you talk about. Something that is clearly not your case.
1) Given your use of this site I hope that is an intentional pun (if so kudos)Apparently a bunch of Pirate Software fans in here...
Nice to see you think on it. The movement as a whole is a nice sentiment, but in truth you should be looking for smaller studios you like where their 1 or two titles are their lifeblood & they live or die on their name. Games like No Mans Sky & Cyber Punk if released by a larger studio would have been half-ass patched and abandoned, instead they received massive reworks, overhauls and fixes because of the studios involved & have become some of the best games out there in their respective fields (nomans sky received ANOTHER massive free DLC a few months ago, again).I have already conceded on it and will admit i was a bit impulsive and slapdash and didn't due my due diligence with my initial posting . i will take the L and move on.
Pirate Software is a dev studio.1) If you didn't want to harm games you wouldn't be downloading them from a site offering them for free... so for 1, you are being g a hypocrite right now
I was editing my post when you responded... so you were not joking?Pirate Software is a dev studio.
The best way for you would be to look it up and all the controversies surrounding it.I was editing my post when you responded... so you were not joking?
I know its a dev/streamer, but you do know what this site is, right?The best way for you would be to look it up and all the controversies surrounding it.
I won't give anything away because everyone can form their own opinion.
I know its a dev/streamer, but you do know what this site is, right?