You are encouraging people to try and scam a refund after being able to enjoy playing the game (for however long they subbed)? Only a total scumbag would try to pull something like that, and there is no way you could get away with it anyway.
The question to ask yourself now is- would I have bought and subscribed to ESO had I known how radically different this service/product is to the one that I was sold?
I don't know any Australians who would be spiteful and stupid enough to do what the OP is encouraging.
T and C doesn't trump consumer protection laws.
AzraelKrieg wrote: »Should point out that games, unlike a lot of other products sold in Australia, only have a 30 day warranty at best. There is also this little nugget you conveniently skipped.
You can ask a business for your preference of a free repair, replacement or refund, but you are not always entitled to one. For example, the consumer guarantees do not apply if you got what you asked for but simply changed your mind, found it cheaper somewhere else, decided you did not like the purchase or had no use for it.
By the sounds of it, because ZOS has changed the business model and you don't agree with said business model you no longer like the purchase that you have made and you've changed your mind. Therefore it is not covered by the ACL. This was the biggest thing I had to try and explain to customers when the laws were changed. Sorry OP but they can legally not offer refund in this case.
Also, they have no Australian store front. Every product they sell is either through a reseller or direct via their website. The ACL would apply only to the reseller but since a reasonable amount of time has elapsed and the fact you clearly have changed your mind, you are not entitled to a refund.
The question to ask yourself now is- would I have bought and subscribed to ESO had I known how radically different this service/product is to the one that I was sold?
ZOS_GinaBruno wrote: »Short answer is DKs likely won't be seeing a ton of changes before we go live; this class is still quite powerful (as it should be being a tank), even after some of the adjustments we've made to other classes and abilities.
As usual, an armchair lawyer speaks and demonstrates his cluelessness.Just a shout out to australian ESO purchases/subscribers.
ESO is misleading you as to the refund policy.
If you would not have bought this game if you had known it was going b2p you can ask for a refund. Australian consumer law quoted below.
Replacements and refunds
You can ask for a replacement or refund if the problem with the product is major.
Replaced products must be of an identical type to the product originally supplied. Refunds should be the same amount you have already paid, provided in the same form as your original payment.
The business may take into account how much time has passed since you bought the product considering the following factors:
type of product
how a consumer is likely to use the product
the length of time for which it is reasonable for the product to be used
the amount of use it could reasonably be expected to tolerate before the failure becomes noticeable.
For a major problem with services you can cancel the contract and obtain a refund or seek compensation for the drop in value of your services provided compared to the price paid.
What is a major problem?
A product or good has a major problem when:
it has a problem that would have stopped someone from buying it if they’d known about it
it is unsafe
it is significantly different from the sample or description
it doesn’t do what the business said it would, or what you asked for and can’t easily be fixed.
A service has a major problem when:
it has a problem that would have stopped someone from buying it if they’d known about it
it is substantially unfit for its common purpose and can’t easily be fixed within a reasonable time
it does not meet the specific purpose you asked for and cannot easily be fixed within a reasonable time
it creates an unsafe situation.
https://www.accc.gov.au/consumers/consumer-rights-guarantees/repair-replace-refund
Personally I'll stick around a while and see what happens - but all Australians should be told their rights.
What rubbish, you got what you bought and paid for, access to a game. MMOs are expected to change, they even say "game experience may change". In any legal setting the 'change' F2P will make is marginal to non-existent, far, far bigger changes have taken place and will do so even under the subscription regime: the removal of VR is HUGE compared to the trivial change to payment method F2P will bring.The question to ask yourself now is- would I have bought and subscribed to ESO had I known how radically different this service/product is to the one that I was sold?
lordrichter wrote: »Looks like people are transitioning from Anger to Bargaining...