I thought it was strange to be prompted to agree to it right there. Those clever and pesky lawyers.
*tips cap to Bungie*
Well played.
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Most online games I play readdress the EULA every DLC.
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Most prominent online games do this with every single patch.
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I don't recall ever seeing one. Was pretty interesting to me.
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All software comes with a EULA. What surprised me was that prompt just now showed up. Usually you have to accept it while initially installing. Little bit of an over-sight on their part. I could be wrong, but I thought the days of auto-acceptance just by using it are gone. They have to prompt before the first use.
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Oh, I know. I've just never seen one pop up in game 3 months after release. Piqued my "why you giving me this [i]now[/i]?" meter.
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I hate to be that guy, but because of the delayed EULA, users might be eligible for a class action. You'd need a lot of people to sign on though. Prob over 500,000 people. To those saying $60 is nothing to sue over, I've received checks for $5 from successful class actions. Just because I added my name to a list I bought but wasn't really affected by. So you never know. If it really is a breach, and a lawyer can get enough angry consumers, there might be something there. I hope Bungie just corrects the nightfall issue. Pretty lame on their part.
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Any one dare to reject the agreement?
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I'm not signing anything. I'm calling xbox, my bank and Bungie to demand a refund. They can't do this now and not offer a refund. Once I sign they can do whatever they want. They are probably going to pull the plug and cut thier losses. Those that pres 'A' will lose their riugt to sue. Those of us that stand our ground will make them pay. Going to miss the grind.
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Edited by Elyot: 2/3/2015 6:33:01 AMHi, sorry to bother you but you know how this affects those with the CD version?
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I did... dare they do anything the court is where we will meet...