I'm reasonably sure most European countries have laws protecting the customer from such actions. I know mine does, if the product significantly differs from what was offered and I was misled into buying, I'm entitled to a refund no matter what the company policy says.
Ehh...not quite. If you are doing business inside another country, you are subject to that country's laws.U.S. Company, U.S. Law
Was the actual physical copy of the game sold in Australian stores. If not then it was purchased online outside of Australia.

Yes .. and that applies to an MMO going F2P .. HOW?I'm reasonably sure most European countries have laws protecting the customer from such actions. I know mine does, if the product significantly differs from what was offered and I was misled into buying, I'm entitled to a refund no matter what the company policy says.
That's true, and partially caused by our own unwillingness to fight for better services. Malfunction is considered normal in this industry. If I bought a vacuum cleaner that didn't work when I got home, I'd return it immediately. If it happens with a video game, I just wait until the servers get fixed... in a week or so... maybe.I'm reasonably sure most European countries have laws protecting the customer from such actions. I know mine does, if the product significantly differs from what was offered and I was misled into buying, I'm entitled to a refund no matter what the company policy says.
Mine too. They do seem to have problems applying these laws to games and online services though.
I'm reasonably sure most European countries have laws protecting the customer from such actions. I know mine does, if the product significantly differs from what was offered and I was misled into buying, I'm entitled to a refund no matter what the company policy says.
fromtesonlineb16_ESO wrote: »
Armchair lawyers are so amusing, their cluelessness never ceases to amaze me.
I'm going by what I remember, but am not 100% sure about. I did some reading on it before, but it was long ago. I am sure about my country because I had to exercise that right on one occasion (not related to video games). I could check, but I don't have time for that.I'm reasonably sure most European countries have laws protecting the customer from such actions. I know mine does, if the product significantly differs from what was offered and I was misled into buying, I'm entitled to a refund no matter what the company policy says.
What, exactly, is changing with this product? Nothing. Just the pay options. "Reasonably sure" about "most" countries means you dont know. Frivolous claims are...frivolous. Looking for any and every reason to be self entitled is the real problem here.
Probably why all copies of they game were pulled from Australian shelves before the announcement was made.
Yep prohibited by australian law. But so is telling Australians they cannot get a refund. As I said at the start - the issue here is Zos advertising that customers in Australia cannot have accesses to a refund.
Please read before posting. T&C don't give them the right to mislead consumers on their rights.