![]() Broomstick is still in the hands of many, and always will be (you can’t destroy curator copies), though it’s not like that matters for whatever other legal issues as you’ve ceased selling. It didn’t change Virtual Basement’s position here either. Nor does that answer seem concerned with restoring faith/goodwill or easing confusion/grievances. Originally posted by ReptilianWorldOrder:How could I break a TOS agreement before agreeing to any? I'd never even launched the game.Įven for those who did, pointing at some clause addresses the actual question of why you revoked these keys. In this prolonged absence of any real explanations, well, yeah… I’m left feeling like Virtual Basement and Ashton Anderson really went out of their way to spite people like me. At best this TOS shield “because I can” seems a deflection for acknowledging some emotional component: “How dare you all have what I don’t want you to. No one really seems interested in offering any logical motivations. Meanwhile, I’m left holding the bag for my crime: being lucky enough to find/purchase a key for a game that couldn’t be acquired by any other means. Maybe the seller will walk away with their windfall though. ![]() You conducted a mass blackout without discriminating actual violations (even TOS) from invalidating property people might actually be entitled due earlier consideration provided to you all. That’s really the only change I can see, while I can see how the seller might try to dodge that right: the key did in fact work as promised, yet recalled for no clear fault of their own. Surely you know that there's no equivalent automatic refund process for purchases like mine… but now there’s a risk created I’ll end up deprived of any restitution and my purchase here. Nor was there any means to even officially obtain Broomstick anymore, so a huge majority of the go-to grievances are totally moot before even deployed. Hell, if anything, the whole thing seems likely to foster resentment, not quash any.Īlternatively, what harm did my 3rd party purchase pose that I’m missing here? While I understand the many reasons developers dislike resellers, that sentiment doesn't somehow innately render my purchase illegal/unjustified. So what’s the benefit of revoking? It's clearly not a calculated risk preventing whoever from launching a busted game and maybe mistakenly holding that against Virtual Basement and Blue Isle Publishing for all time. That transaction was as promised until your intervention to revoke all for reasons of that I’m pressed to understand. And, with only those press/promo/whatever copies remaining, I was perfectly aware of the dead game and received exactly what I'd expected. Naturally it was for game collecting purposes. I bought a key from a 3rd party seller when you refunded all Steam purchases. (c) only taking what people purchased while restoring what they'd forgone.īut I'm not seeing these factors here. (a) under the impression it was helpful and what all parties wanted While I sure don't support your decision forcing refunds on all Steam customers either, there's room to argue you were at least. ![]() How could I break a TOS agreement before agreeing to any? I'd never even launched the game.Įven for those who did, pointing at some clause hardly addresses the actual question of why you revoked these keys. Denn sowas sollte auch keine Normalität erreichen. (Denn welches ernstzunehmes Studio macht so etwas?) Scam nicht direkt, aber nur weil sie das Recht haben, macht dieser dickmove das Studio weniger attraktiv. You have all rights to ignore such scam accusionsĪre you sure you removed all licenses? Because I have several people in my friendlist that still have their gameĬurator copies are still up, those can't be revoked via automatic means by developers. You clearified what you guys had to do and thats bascially your job done. These people accepted the Steam ToS when creating their accounts as well as your ToS when buying your game, Period. You bought a key that was a beta testing key from a third party grey market, anyone who buys a key from this kind of website is breaking our TOS. If you want a refund you will have to go through the website you bought the key from, this is completely and entirely outside of our control. We do not support or endorse any third party key reselling websites, and that is actually strictly against our terms of service. Originally posted by Laura:We have revoked all press keys, beta keys, streamer keys, please do not buy from any third party market places. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |