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Ubisoft says players suing over The Crew shutdown shouldn’t have expected to own the game forever


Ubisoft has argued again that players who buy video games should not expect to own the game forever.

This argument comes from Ubisoft’s decision to close the crew last year. In December 2023, the editor silently eliminated the crew of digital windows and confirmed that the game only online would no longer be playable from April 2024.

“After almost a decade of support, we will be dismantling the crew 1 on March 31, 2024,” he said at that time. “We understand that this can be disappointing for players who still enjoy the game, but it is necessary due to the next server infrastructure and licenses limitations.”

Two players impacted by the closure launched legal actions against Ubisoft, accusing Ubisoft of violating California consumer protection laws.

At that time, the plaintiffs said that Ubisoft deceived the players “by telling them that they were buying a game, when in fact, everything they were renting was a limited license to access a game that the defendants choose to maintain in their own nobility obligation.”

The plaintiffs also affirmed that the packaging of the product “falsely represented that the crew itself was coded on physical disks that consumers could buy or digital files could pay consumers”, when in fact, “physical discs those that consumers paid consumers were more similar to a key they could use to open the agencies of this remote server, that defenders could one day that consumers could not maintain.”

Now, as seen by Polygon, Ubisoft is trying to expel the demand, arguing that players should never have waited for the game only online indefinitely, even if they bought a physical copy.

“Frustrated with Ubisoft’s recent decision to withdraw the game after a notification period delineated in the packaging of the product, the plaintiffs apply a kitchen sink approach in the name of a class supposed of national clients, claiming eight causes of shares, including the violations of the False Advertisements of California, the Law of Unfair Competition and the Law of Legal Remedies of the Consumer Failure to comply with consumer guarantee claims, “wrote the legal claims of consumers.

Ubisoft states that players should have had the expectation that they were buying “property rights without restrictions on the game.”

In a complaint of March, the plaintiffs claim that Ubisoft used activation codes for the game with a expiration of 2099 (which suggests that the game would be in the long term), and that Ubisoft further broke the California law by allowing the gift cards to expire, something that is not legally allowed to happen in the state. The plaintiffs claim that the crew currency system meets the legal requirements that are considered a gift card. Ubisoft has until April 29 to respond.

In response to the reaction of fans last September, Ubisoft announced plans to launch offline modes for crew 2 and crew: Motorfest.

“We want to recognize that some of you expressed concern about access to crew games,” said Stéphane Beley, senior creative director of the Ivory Tower franchise.

“Today, we want to express our commitment to the future of crew 2 and the Motorfest of the crew. We are currently exploring different solutions and we can confirm an off -line mode to guarantee long -term access to both titles.”