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Forums - Gaming Discussion - European Commission plans to ban Free-to-Play games that are not actually free

http://metro.co.uk/2014/02/28/eu-to-ban-free-to-play-unless-games-are-actually-free-4341156/

The European Commission has indicated it wants to stop games calling themselves free if they rely on micrortansactions to make money.

Technially the terrm free-to-play is accurate: it doesn’t cost any money to play these games, but if you actually want to get anywhere in them or, you know, enjoy yourself then you’re going have to pay for in-app purchases and microtransactions.

But following a less than approving investigation by the UK’s Office of Fair Trading it seems as if Brussels is now also looking to tighten up regulations, especially when it comes to ‘misleading’ advertising.

As the European Comission points out there have been complaints from all over the EU, with German authorities already having banned advertising for some online games.

‘Misleading consumers is clearly the wrong business model and also goes against the spirit of EU rules on consumer protection’, said justice commissioner Viviane Reding.

‘The European Commission will expect very concrete answers from the app industry to the concerns raised by citizens and national consumer organisations.’

Ministers have already suggested that they will ban the term ‘free-to-play’ unless the game really is completely free, i.e. it makes its money from in-game advertising instead.

‘The use of the word ‘free’ (or similar unequivocal terms) as such, and without any appropriate qualifications, should only be allowed for games which are indeed free in their entirety, or in other words which contain no possibility of making in-app purchases, not even on an optional basis’, says a Commission statement.

As with the Office of Fair Trading the primary concern seems to be advertising to children, following numerous stories in the press of kids ‘accidentally’ spending hundreds of pounds on in-app purchases.

The Commissions other priorties are laid out as follows:

Games advertised as ‘free’ should not mislead consumers about the true costs involved.
Games should not contain direct exhortations to children to buy items in a game or to persuade an adult to buy items for them.
Consumers should be adequately informed about the payment arrangements and purchases should not be debited through default settings without consumers’ explicit consent.
Traders should provide an email address so that consumers can contact them in case of queries or complaints.

 

Well that throws a wrench into the industry.



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So its about the term F2P not the games.. P2W it is..



 

Face the future.. Gamecenter ID: nikkom_nl (oh no he didn't!!) 

God I hate the EU. By that definition they have to ban everything free because nothing is free in life.



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TL;DR All f2p EA games



Whatever. I don't live there, so it doesn't effect me.



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Awesome!!!



Every Continent should do this



                  

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Respect for EU.



The shittiest "free" games are the games that after dying a few times or after a certain amount of time give you the option of paying to continue playing or waiting a few hours. I want those games to burn in hell.



vivster said:
God I hate the EU. By that definition they have to ban everything free because nothing is free in life.

This would protect alot of kids of being swapped by game developers!!! If a costs money they should NOT to be allowed to promote a game as free to play simply becouse it's not true!!! And I hate people who don't know nothing about the EU but are complaining about the EU!!!