• Oh, Activision (May 2023 edition)

    From Spalls Hurgenson@21:1/5 to All on Wed May 24 11:16:16 2023
    Do none of the CEOs at Activision ever ask themselves, "why is it the
    only time our company makes the news anymore is because we're in
    trouble with the law again?" ;-)

    This time, it's for lootboxes. Turns out, there are lootboxes and microtransaction in "Diablo Immortal". No surprise to anyone, except
    for some reason Activision 'forgot' to mention it to PEGI (that's the
    European version of the ESA in the United States of America; they're
    the ones who slap the ratings on the game). So PEGI didn't mention the inclusion of those nasties in the game's rating.

    Now, arguably most people 'should have known' that Diablo Immortal
    used MTX. But there are a lot of uninformed customers out there, and
    some of them do rely on the ratings to give them an idea as to a
    game's content.

    Anyway, Activision netted themselves a $5000 fine, which is
    ridiculous, but PEGI isn't a governmental agency. They're a trade
    organization who counts Activision as one of their members. Activision
    and PEGI have a contract that the former provides the later with
    correct information, and the (extremely) modest fine is all PEGI could
    (and would want) to push on one of its members.

    Still, it's such a stupid stunt by Activision. It's not as if this
    sort of thing wasn't going to be immediately noticed, and then
    corrected. It may have netted them a few victims, but it also got the
    world's attention on them again (something I'm sure they don't want
    right now as they struggle to get the Microsoft merger pushed
    through).

    It's just another example of the stupid short-term thinking at the
    company. It's not just that they do bad things that's annoying; it's
    that they do them so badly.

    So all I can say when I read stuff like this is moan - again - "Oh, Activision..."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)