Ubisoft Revokes Digital Keys For Games Purchased Via Unauthorised Retailers
RogueyWon writes: For the last several days, some users of Ubisoft's uPlay system have been complaining that copies of games they purchased have been removed from their libraries. According to a statement issued to a number of gaming websites, Ubisoft believes that the digital keys revoked have been "fraudulently obtained." What this means in practice is unclear; while some of the keys may have been obtained using stolen credit card details, others appear to have been purchased from unofficial third-party resellers, who often undercut official stores by purchasing cheaper boxed retail copies of games and selling their key-codes online, or by exploiting regional price differences, buying codes in regions where games are cheaper to sell them elsewhere in the world. The latest round of revocations appears to have triggered an overdue debate into the fragility of customer rights in respect of digital games stores.
“You do not really understand something unless you can explain it to your grandmother.” ok, i don't understand this.
Well, it's final. The Right of First Sale has been revoked. Soap, Ballot, and Jury boxes haven't worked. What's next?
Learn to love Alaska
If we can manage to sue Ubisoft and win to force allowing these sorts of resales, it'd be a huge step towards recognition of the rights of digital purchases.
this shit has to be put down HARD.
It's probably a case of companies buying keys in a cheap region, and selling them to people who otherwise would have to pay more in their region.
They make shitty games and fuck over their customers. I avoid all their games, even the good ones. They are scum.
It's not about piracy it's about control, and what you "BOUGHT" isn't really yours.
In this case UBISOFT has a dispute with gray marketeers and decides to take it out on the customers instead of taking it to the courts with the people they have a problem with they lash out at the customers, taking advantage of the fact the customers will likely have to suck it up.
Do you want piracy? Because this is how you get piracy.
What world do you people live in that you think a key you bought for 50% off on release day was legit?
You still have the ballot box. Vote against Ubisoft with your euros, dollars, or whatever: stop buying Ubisoft games. Buy games in the same genre from their competitors and email your purchases (and reasoning) to Ubisoft support.
So much easier to just play the game without having to deal with all this. Free is just icing on the cake.
STOP FUCKING GIVING UBISOFT MONEY.
By this point, anyone who gets bitten by this or any future shady behavior from a software house with such a sterling DRM reputation deserves whatever they get.
What they don't deserve is our pity. Ridicule maybe. I could even be convinced that "Mocking them" is the appropriate response.
Mod me down with all of your hatred and your journey towards the dark side will be complete!
me in BC buying a car from a guy who bought/brought it in from Alberta and sold it through his car dealership in BC. Then Ford comes in and repossesses my car because I didn't get it through a dealer in BC and because the prices are lower in Alberta so it was unfair to the dealer in BC since it wasn't sold through an authorized dealer.
by TheSpoom (715771) Uncaring Linux user here. I have nothing to add to this but please continue. *munches popcorn*
CC chargeback and if they ban you fully paid games as change back for them as well.
My dad used to always say this, and frankly it drove me a little nuts. Just posessing something doesn't mean you own it. But things like this article highlight the problem of the inverse: if you don't possess your property, there are manifold ways to lose it.
pirate the games and you get no DRM as well
And how would that affect Ubisoft?
FTFA -
Ubisoft claims (for what it's worth) that the only digital keys that they revoked were those purchased fraudulently with stolen credit cards.
No one has a right to keep stolen property. If you buy a watch in a pawn shop, and the police come for it because it's stolen, you forfeit the watch. Don't get me wrong - I absolutely detest Ubisoft, ever since XIII, and will never buy another product of theirs...I hope their corporate building burns down, they lose their IP to someone, and the name Ubisoft becomes a curseword...
But at the same time, clamoring that the stolen goods you purchased on the black market were taken away from you doesn't garner sympathy.
That point is brought up every time EA fucks its customers over. I don't see them hurting for business.
Only the State obtains its revenue by coercion. - Murray Rothbard
What commercial online game doesn't have cd-keys?
Most CC operators won't let you issue that many chargebacks. If they do, they're likely to report you to the police for fraud.
Buck Feta. You know what to do.
I ee what you are saying, but how much due diligence is needed when buying a game ? I am sure most people don't want to entrust their credit card information to what they feel are less than reputable sites. In this case, I see nothing about criminal charges against the sellers. Just a company that thinks(rightly or wrongly) it has the right to take action against people who paid for their product.
From where I sit this is just another erosion of the traditional rights people enjoy when they purchase goods.
"WE would never do that . . ." -- Amazon.
"I believe in Karma. That means I can do bad things to people all day long and I assume they deserve it." : Dogbert
Need to define terms a bit or we will wind up talking past each other. There's plenty of free to play online games where you don't have to make a purchase.
I bought some Ubisoft games at Big Lots on clearance for $5 in CD/DVD form.
One of the games had a discount code for half off the Ubisoft web store. I bought a few titles and applied the discount code to get half off my order. I entered my debit card and paid and waited for the software to ship. Two weeks later my order was canceled, out of stock on every item I ordered. My money was refunded. I tried the discount code again but now it doesn't work.
The games I bought for $5 at Big Lots, the keys were no longer valid.
Remember, Slashdot does not have a -1 disagree moderation, and no, troll, flamebait, and overrated are not substitutes.
Or maybe it would be an idea to not buy from the cheapest seller
What a great moral to the story! "Quit price-shopping, assholes - Pay full retail, or we... will... fuck you!"
Glad to see people feel just peach about that.
One problem is that how does the consumer know who are authorized resellers? Ubisoft doesn't have a list that I can find, so how do you know if a site is legitimate or not? It's hard to go by the old adage "if it looks too good to be true, it probably is" anymore, with so many sites having sales at cut rate prices on digital goods. I picked up a few "too good to be true" bargains last month during the Steam sales.
Your beef is with the retailer who sold you the product. Isn't that how consumer protection laws work? Unless you want to start a class action lawsuit or something...
And some day when you are old and you realize how you squandered your precious hours
fucking around with some stupid game, you will regret it. Mark my words, kiddies.
Whatever you say, Mr. Apologist White Knight Shill.
Games allow me to experience things that real life never could. The same goes for movies and books, which I guess you are also against.
Have fun in your dull, unimaginative little world.
(1) Ask for a receipt/proof of purchase.
(2) Give the customer the option to upgrade to the current paid version, by paying the difference.
That sounds much better than taking value away from someone who might otherwise have liked a Ubisoft title.
Steam has been revoking "out-of-region" keys for some time now. I bought a Dead Island key (unfortunately. Man, that game is awful) off of eBay for 6 bucks not too long after it came out. Turns out the key was for eastern europe market. I activated it just fine in the states, played it a few times, and let it sit there. A few weeks/months later upon logging into Steam I got a warning popup regarding such sort of keys, and the game removed from my list. Not that I miss it much.
I don't condone what they are doing, as the consumer loses in the end and that seems like a horrible practice for any business.
Nonsense, this is just market efficiency. The real threat to gaming is the possibility of some woman blowing a guy to get a few $K in sales of a lousy game. Here, Ubisoft, take my money!
"They were pure niggers." – Noam Chomsky
Ubisoft claims (for what it's worth) that the only digital keys that they revoked were those purchased fraudulently with stolen credit cards. https://www.viva168.com/
I revoked your games from my computers long ago.
So in some instances, customers who believed that they legitimately purchased a product are finding that UBI has stolen it from them. UBI, rather than go after the retailers through proper legal channels, has decided to steal from they customer base.
This sounds like a sustainable business model? Really?
I understand that some people may have fraudulently obtained titles through illegal channels. I'm not talking about that. People who believed that they were making a legit purchase are being ripped off? Even if you did knowingly make an illegal purchase, UBI needs to work through proper legal channels and incur the costs of such methods.
If a corporation wishes to be considered a legal entity, then the legal entity needs to act as one.
Autodesk (makers of Autocad) tried to block resale of their products on ebay. They lost horribly in court. The end.
Chargebacks can seriously hurt the affected merchants. For one thing, usually the merchant has to pay a fee on top of refunding the full amount for each individual chargeback, possibly losing that fee even if they subsequently challenge the chargeback and win. For another thing, an unusually high chargeback rate overall can result in much worse terms for future card payment services or even being denied the facility entirely, which for many businesses is effectively a mortal injury.
If it's Ubisoft that was taking the money directly, this hurts them directly. It potentially even follows their officers if they move to other businesses later as well. If it's not Ubisoft taking money directly, then it hurts their resellers, and word quickly gets around that being a reseller for Ubisoft is a lousy gig. Either way, Ubisoft are losing something.
If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
Game companies have been doing lots to negate the right of first sale for quite a while. But this is different. They created a product then didn't like how some sellers were taking advantage of arbitraging how they bought it. Rather than try to deal with the retailers legally (if they even had a legal option), they decided to just punish innocent customers who have no good way to know all of the details of the Ubisoft wholesale and retail structure. Good for you Ubisoft, thanks for driving another nail into the damn DRM coffin. Do this enough and maybe the sheep will learn not to buy DRM products. (Yea, I don't really believe that the public is smart enough to learn, but I can hope.)
I'm an American. I love this country and the freedoms that we used to have.
Besides the fact you can't steal "copyright" or "activation codes" (you can only defraud the company which is not the same thing) as another is not being deprived of anything the problem here is that there is ultimately some risk merchants should have to take responsibility for. Once you give something to another person it's not yours any more to do as you please. Downstream users who've already activated the product shouldn't have to put up with this, but then again they shouldn't have to activate in the first place either. Your time to say "I'm not interested in doing business" with your direct customer passed.
Charge backs are a real problem, but the problem shouldn't be with the fraudsters. It should be with the payment processing industry which refuses to fix its systems so merchants can't be scammed. There is a fix which is doable, but they're not doing it because the payment processing industry makes money off of the fraud. Each charge back results in a fee paid to the financial institution whose card is misappropriated and fees paid to the processors themselves (ie Visa, Master Card, American Express, etc). The charge back hits the merchant the hardest. Where a merchant may loose thousands of dollars the payment processor might still make $60 USD and the financial institution for which the card is connected might may $25-50 USD. Those fees are charged to the merchant who was defrauded.
The solution is fairly simple. The cards need to include a keypad on them. The card holder should then need to authenticate with his card each time he wishes to use it. If the cards user knows the password its reasonable to assume the user is authorized and thus any payments are authorized. To prevent a man-in-the-middle attack the card would simply need to show the name of the store and the amount to be charged. The card then would simply sign an encrypted note (ie think GPG) including the company to be paid and the amount. An unencrypted part could include the financial institution contact info. That then gets sent to the merchant and the merchant forwards it to the financial institution of the card holder. The financial institution decrypts the note and says "yup, this is legit" and notifies the payment processor that the financial institution will pay up (all signed of course, and the payment processor would know all registered financial institutions keys). The payment processor then just has to credit the financial institution for which the merchant holds an account at. The merchant's financial institution would then notify the merchant (which its already going to know, and sign).
Choosing to be a customer of UBISOFT is like choosing to be a customer of SONY, you just don't do it. Unless of course you like taking it in the ass without lube or even the common courtesy of a reach-around.
Dear UbiSoft,
You've just entered the same realm as Sony as a completely assbackwards company with no respect for your customers whom I will never do business with again, no matter what.
(not that I had a very high opinion of UbiSoft as it was, but this kind of shenanigan just brought it to the bottom.)
Didn't Swatch try this same ploy with Costco, trying to go after them for buying their junk from one country to resell it else where? And they're losing every court battle over it, too.
Sadly, doubt anyone will try to drag UbiSoft into court over video game key revocations.. but yeah.. what they are doing has set precedent against them having a leg to stand on in a court.
For this to work, you needed to buy straight from Ubisoft. You probably bought through somebody else, who will suffer and will be discouraged from reselling Ubisoft games out of their designated market, which is precisely what Ubisoft wants.
"When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
When you give your money to big game corporations: EA, Blizzard-Activision, Ubisoft.
Their motive is greed; shareholders are their primary concern. Draconian DRM appeals to shareholders, makes them think their investment is 'protected'.
Gamers... they don't really care about gamers, do they? Don't fall for the corporate statements made by the public relations employee.
We saw this with Diablo 3. We saw this with Plants vs Zombies 2 (compare it with PvZ 1 from PopCap Games, before EA's acquisition). We saw how EA raped the Command and Conquer franchise after acquiring it from Westwood Studios.
Moral of the story? Support indie game developers instead. Voting with your wallet is effective.
When a publisher can revoke a legitimately (or at least, good-faith) purchased key, what hope does the consumer have when his OS goes subscription?
Fuck it. If Gearbox pull this shit with Homeworld I'll just stick with my original boxed copy and forego the new content.
Political debates have me rolling my eyes so much I think I got optical whiplash. I should sue. - Foamy The Squirrel
See, this is how I know that, like Joe_Dragon, you didn't RTFA or even RTFS.
The sellers in question are "unauthorized" sellers that Ubisoft doesn't want to sell the games. Ubisoft WANTS them to lose money, and don't care about losing rep with them. A chargeback against that seller would only further Ubisoft's goal.
the real question is why is ubi selling keys without boxes and knows the keys? they have their own service for buying the game online if you want to, in which case you don't get a cdkey to transfer that you could sell online to someone.
if you acquired the box, the right to play comes with that box and the key comes inside the box. And I really don't think that third parties buying boxed games and selling the keys online would be asking ubisoft to remove the keys from play if they got a chargeback(they're not ubisoft authorized sellers anyways and ubi would be happy to fuck them over).
there has to be something more to it.
I suspect that they're selling bulk keys to cybercafes etc at discount pricing or something similar and deactivating these keys if they find that they're not used in the region sold to..
another explanation - that they already used iirc months ago with another similar incident, was that large amonts of keys got taken from a hacked ubi server.
world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
I don't even bother with commercial PC games anymore. Nobody can make a fun game today without treating users like shit once they purchase. Just isn't worth it.
I've seen this happen to friends with various puzzle games. Vendor either went out of business or sold out to someone else and games stopped working or couldn't be reinstalled after a computer crash because the registration servers no longer resolved.
Predict a coming wave of surprises in the future as people begin belatedly realize the strange wording on the side of the box saying vendors assert the right to abandon the game and deny access anytime they want isn't just an idle threat or legalese to be tuned out.
... according to TFA:
If you have to need all that to your granny, tell her that in the New World Order where corporations reigns, customers lose all their rights !
The corporations will more than gladly take your money and after the customers have parted with their hard-earned money the corporations will forcibly take away what you have bought with your - and you, the customer can't do diddly because you, the customer, have no rights
Remember, in the New World Order that we live in, The corporations are.always.right
"Fraudulently obtained" could mean that they were keys offered under, say, a cyber-cafe program, or en-masse but with a caveat not to resell, or for developer testing, or just plain stolen, or any number of things.
All of which, sorry, but that's a legitimate reason to revoke if they've then been resold to the public as individual licences.
I have ALWAYS been suspicious of keys from anything other than the original store precisely because of this - you have NO way of knowing if they are genuine or not or whether they could be revoked or not.
And I was always suspicious that a key could be sold cheaper than, say, Steam or Origin or whoever were selling them. That just reeks that it's cheating some rule, even if it's been sold out of region restrictions or whatever - someone, somewhere is losing money and that makes me suspicious why they would allow that to continue.
Sorry, but Ubisoft aren't doing anything "wrong" here, maybe they aren't doing it "right" though (if you know who these keys are, why not put a pop-up on their account next time they login telling them that they don't have a genuine key - but you'll sell them one - maybe at a discount - for X amount of money so that you don't lose on their third-party sales and they get to legitimise their purchase? A bit like MS did with Windows keys a while back?).
Sorry, but the nature of app stores now is that you can't take third-party keys. Hell, I was incredibly suspicious of Humble Bundles but they seem to be genuine and approved and there isn't a lot of money involved on my end if they do get revoked (I'll be annoyed at the inconvenience, but I won't have lost the games as they provide DRM-free downloads too).
When you use an app store, whether that's Steam, or Windows Marketplace or Google Play Store, you have to get the keys from those companies. Ask yourself why would they co-operate with rivals selling their keys at a lower price than in the store, and offer their download and account services to other companies at a loss?
This may be a step backwards in terms of consumer protection, but equally people have been buying cars that only the original manufacturer can service for DECADES. As soon as you fit a non-standard part, the original company just doesn't want to know any more - in terms of warranty, service, etc. I consider this the same problem.
I have over 800 games on Steam. I trust that they are all genuine - lots are via the Steam store itself (most with money earned in-store via selling items from other Steam games!), and the rest are via trusted bundles that do have a relationship with Steam.
Whenever I saw someone fussing about saving a dollar by going through some external game key store that Steam used to obscure the URL to in their forums (always a good sign that they're official!), I wondered when it would catch up with them. I'd much rather have a genuine game for £10 than a game that could be revoked at any time without any legal comeback for £9. If you don't have the difference to spare, you shouldn't be buying games anyway.
Sorry, but this is your own fault. The only possible excuse is if someone's gifted it to you and you had reason to trust them but I'm not sure if uPlay even has that facility. At least on Steam, all that would happen in that case would be a reversal of the transaction that gave you the game (so you get back anything you traded for it, or nothing if you were stupid enough to trade for it outside of Steam).
Still waiting for all those Russian-sold games to catch up with the people on Steam who bought them cheap, or the games from outside Steam places that people tried to legitimise by using them despite the fact that Steam never say they have a relationship with those companies at all.
And not seeing the obvious. This is a move to close down the 2nd hand market. It is so obvious, a 5 year old could get it. And only gots to show that more than ever, you are not buying programs anymore, but just licenses to run them. On a side note, nobody is forcing you to buy from Ubisoft. If you are not fond of firms with underhanded tactics, do not buy from hem. It is a pity a firm with such a long reputation gets this reputation.
I plan to die well before I'm old, with my dick pumping madly into a tight pussy and the needle of a pure heroin-filled syringe in my arm.
Ubisoft might not be able to take them to the courts. For example if these resellers are in China or developing countries where the local authorities don't care about foreign IP cases. Technically speaking, it's actually the customers who have a dispute with the resellers, because those resellers knowingly sold them dud keys. It's not much different than if you buy a fake branded Mac, take it to an Apple repair centre and they tell you to go away. Your dispute is not with Apple. Your dispute is with the entity that sold you the fake goods.
Look at it another way. What if these "resellers" were actually selling you random numbers instead of game activation keys. When you try them out and discover they don't work .... your dispute is not with Ubisoft. They would be totally correct to deny activation of the game. Your dispute is with the fraudster who sold you the invalid keys.
They weren't dud keys. They were good keys, that UBISOFT revoked. It would be like GM using OnStar to disable your car because they found out you bought it cheaper in South America.
Oh dear. Some idiots got burned (again)
If something you "buy" has to be activated via the 'net you don't own it and it will be taken away from you whenever the owner pleases (and they will). If you don't understand this you're an idiot. Stop buying this crap.
News at 11.
No, if you read the article they clearly state the keys were fraudulently obtained. If you obtain keys via fraud, they are almost by definition not "good keys".
The suggestion here is that Ubisoft is targeting keys bought with fraudulent credit cards. Sites such as G2A also act as a platform for private sellers to shift video game activation keys. It's understood that those buying these keys do so at their own risk, although many of the third-party websites promise to refund customers who find their keys do not work.
As I said earlier they haven't gone after the sites selling the keys, while the sites offer refunds to the purchasers. It seems the sites are more on the up and up than UBISOFT.
But you believe the claims of Ubi and disbelieve Putin...
...apparently only good for the goose.
"who often undercut official stores by purchasing cheaper boxed retail copies of games and selling their key-codes online,"
Simple solution here Ubi: stop charging different prices for the same fucking game. It's a real novel concept. Nevermind that part of Capitalism is the purchaser doing what they can to obtain things at the lowest price possible. But hey, it's only good when it's more money in *your* pocket, right?
I hope Ubisoft are going to contact each of those players and give them a refund directly. Ubisoft's beef is with the seller not with the player.
SURELY NOT!!!!!
Valve did this same thing in 2007 with keys to The Orange Box bought from Thailand, which were considerably cheaper. They were very up front about it, they showed the Thai box packaging which clearly stated in English that this was not to be used outside of Thailand, etc.
There was a bit of blowback, and some hemming and hawing like we're seeing here, but ultimately it wasn't a big deal. Whether or not you agree with it, most people knew they were basically cheating by buying a cheap key from a shady foreign website, and they got busted for it (although they weren't out much money because, you know, cheap)
Honestly, when you're buying software you have to agree to the terms or else you don't buy it and you don't get to have it. Yes, if you think this is a dick move from Ubisoft then you're perfectly within your rights to avoid buying their products anymore. But don't think that they're the only ones who do this. Or have the right/ability to do this. And don't think this gives you some sort of right to pirate their games. Or that they had better give you what you want or else you'll pirate their games. You're wrong.
Schnapple
Been many years since I've purchased a UbiSoft product. Too many headaches with them loading up software that protects their product and trashes my computer. Even if this isn't a current practice, I've learned my lesson and no longer purchase their products as a result. Hearing this story I'm not surprised there are more problems with the company practices. It only reinforces my past experience with the company. And I certainly will not be customer anytime in the future.
UbiSoft has major cleaning up to perform. I wish them well....
Has Comcast disconnected your Internet account? Same here. You can read about it at http://comcastissue.blogspot.com
That's what happens when you TRUST other's with YOUR data. On the other hand if you install it manually, on your own machine, at least that software is under YOUR control.
Except that it penalizes the gray market people, and only the gray market people. It doesn't hurt Ubisoft; if they sold copies of the game directly, it was at a price they approved of.
"When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
Ubisoft - Buyer beware.
Arbitrage is not "grey market". It is perfectly legal. Your explanation of how it "hurts" the publisher is completely specious. If the manufacturer is not selling his product at a profit- even in the lowest priced market- I have no sympathy for them. That is a classic case of "making it up in volume" and we all know that idea is garbage.
Good point. I was thinking of the traditional PC games.
I'm just curious about one thing, at what point do they "Not do this"? to a customer? Let's take me as an example. I guarantee you that I own and have right now the disks for at least ten or more Ubisoft games that I still play, because I have used Steam and Uplay, and my PS3/PS4, Xbox 360 or Xbox One so long that I have a back catalogue that most people would consider insane. When does it go from they are ok with those customers, to them even tracking down a code from some Ebay purchase, whether or not it's known to the buyer that it's performing this magical hula dance that gets your game key from some poorer market, such as India? If they know, as I always enter my DLC codes before I even install a game, that I own those games, so I don't ever notice anything bad, but I do have five or so games that I purchased directly from Amazon.com or Ebay that were code's that I submitted on Uplay for the game to be on my PC, as you always get those people that talk about the PC master race, and the buyer, like myself, decides that we do want the game to run at the Highest framerate possible, with the highest 4k settings. As I recently upgraded my PC to an AMD 9590 liquid cooled system with an AMD Radeon R9 295x2, also liquid cooled, and the AMD ram with the 2400 mhz rating, even though my overclock limits that speed to 1866 so that I can run my cpu at 5.8 or so Ghz, If I, who bought the game's from Amazon/ebay/whatever steam sale sells the game to me as a code, but they know for a fact that I'm a legitimate customer that buys a crap ton of their games, way more than the 10 estimate, would they destroy that customers faith, or do they ok those keys, simply because they know that regardless of that customer buying a 20 dollar key on Ebay has also purchased nearly every game they put out, even downloadable games like the Trials motorcycle game, that's a 20 dollars brand new dlc only, no disk purchase. So if you are a long time, and ardent supporter, do you think that they would destroy the trust for that customer, or do you think that this type of targeting is for those who buy one or two Ubisoft games yearly?
I am legitimately curious if this happens, do they forgive the long time customer, or do they target Everyone, regardless of loyalty? We all know that Microsoft has a horrible habit of pissing of customers, namely me, because we find out that on certain occasions, Microsoft has emailed customers telling them that they have been given free games, for no reason other than being loyal Microsoft customers. I own two pc's running Windows 8, before that, I had two keys for Windows Vista 64 bit, before that, one key for every OS they have ever put out, as I've never owned a Mac, I own a Surface Tablet, an Xbox 360 that I sent in for repairs at least 6 times due to the dreaded red ring of death issue, Purchased over the course of that timeframe, two separate and brand new Xbox 360 pro's I believe they were called, the Special black versions that were slim, twice purchased the original model of Xbox 360, The Xbox One, and at least fifty to one hundred of their Store's downloadable games, plus a large collection of actual Physical disk copies of games, yet never, Ever have I been one of those people that gets a free game. I'm constantly on my twitter talking to Microsoft with problems on my Surface tablet, and comment on their differing messages like posts by Larry Herb, but still, never seem to be that guy that gets the free game, and it literally pisses me off to no end. Worse, they recently over the past few months, gave away actual systems, custom systems to those they considered "Good" customers, so by what metric do they determine who's deserving of those free games? Is it that you spend your entire day playing on that Xbox, and it's more about your Gamerscore, or is it the number of games you buy and play on that console? They never let anyone know what exactly they need to be introduced to that lucky segment of gamers that seem to get the goods for free. And to be honest, it's driving me towards no longer b
Why should one buy a 'download' of anything if it can suddenly 'disappear'?