ChocolateCupcakes
Member
He has a legit copy that he paid for. How is that shady?
He doesn't have a receipt. Thats a pretty big problem.
He has a legit copy that he paid for. How is that shady?
What? You are still liable to it if you pressed the I agree button.
Hopefully you get your account back OP but lets be honest, you tried to get away with something shady and it didn't work.
I don't really see how that is relevant. Not reading them doesn't make them void.
Ya, that would go a long way towards uninformed users getting unfairly burned like the OP.Why are little stores even getting the game so early? Couldn't MS just only deliver to the 'ma and pa' stores the day before? If they can't be trusted not to break the date, don't even give them the chance.
You told Brandt, he told me. I know what happened. Yes? Yes?Stores problem. They sold the game under the table. That is like working for cash and complaining when the IRS asks about the income.
He has a legit copy that he paid for. How is that shady?
I don't have receipts for lots of games I own legit copies of.He doesn't have a receipt. Thats a pretty big problem.
Except there is no proof of purchase. And the OP himself said it was shady. Are you trying to argue just to argue at this point?
You told Brandt, he told me. I know what happened. Yes? Yes?
Where I live, when dealing with consumers you have to specifically highlight terms of service that are unusual or discriminatory to the consumer. If that didn't happen, they are not part of the contract. Clauses that are very discriminatory to the consumers don't take effect even if they were specifically highlighted.
Terms of service are not a viable blanket-excuse for terrible treatment of consumers.
I find it ridiculous that people are defending someone's console being banned for playing a legit copy of Halo 4 that he paid for. I think it's wrong. And you're the one arguing in circles.Except there is no proof of purchase. And the OP himself said it was shady. Are you trying to argue just to argue at this point?
He doesn't have a receipt. Thats a pretty big problem.
And how is this relevant?
I don't have receipts for lots of games I own legit copies of.
And how is this relevant?
It depends what you consider to be legit, it's a legitimate product, it's not a legitimate sale.I find it ridiculous that people are defending someone's console being banned for playing a legit copy of Halo 4 that he paid for. I think it's wrong. And you're the one arguing in circles.
Maybe common sense for savvy GAFers, but for the majority of the game buying public, no it's not.
Between XBL bannings and waiting for Steam games to unlock, street dates are becoming another unwelcome form of DRM. If you game has gone gold, is in stores in some capacity and you acquired it fairly, anything should be fair game even if it's not "official".
Hundreds of stories of people getting banned for playing Halo 4 early, and you go ahead and do it anyways?
Yeah you deserve what you got.
There's no disagreement on the fact that the copy of the game is legitimate - Microsoft can't differentiate on whether he got a receipt at the till or not (and it doesn't matter, an act of sale doesn't require a receipt).
If you are trying to dispute something like this you need a proof of purchase. Period.
dudeWhile that is true for Microsoft's process of unbanning you from Xbox Live, this isn't necessarily relevant in a suit of law and could theoretically land the company in hot water in some jurisdictions.
But I'm mainly arguing that Microsoft is treating its customers terribly by acting this way, and terms of service are no excuse or reasonable justification for terrible policies.
Retailer because they broke their contract/agreement with the distributor.
Pretty easy
While that is true for Microsoft's process of unbanning you from Xbox Live, this isn't necessarily relevant in a suit of law and could theoretically land the company in hot water in some jurisdictions.
But I'm mainly arguing that Microsoft is treating its customers terribly by acting this way and that terms of service are no excuse or reasonable justification for terrible policies.
I personally agree. The people saying that it's Microsoft's fault or the OP's fault I do not agree with.
I find it ridiculous that people are defending someone's console being banned for playing a legit copy of Halo 4 that he paid for. I think it's wrong. And you're the one arguing in circles.
Where I live, when dealing with consumers you have to specifically highlight terms of service that are unusual or discriminatory to the consumer. If that didn't happen, they are not part of the contract. Clauses that are very discriminatory to the consumers don't take effect even if they were specifically highlighted.
Terms of service are not a viable blanket-excuse for terrible treatment of consumers.
Good thing I'm only talking about Microsoft then, huh.
I'm not saying Microsoft is 100% right, but OP isn't entirely a victim.
It's not HIS copy. There is no transaction. The store still owns it. Just because you hand money to someone in a retail store doesn't mean you own it. It needs to be put in the system to handle inventory and balance books. Also, what's to stop the associate from pocketing the money and claiming you stole it?
Unless you use cash, every transaction has a history that can be tracked from either the business or your credit card company. If you use cash, you should hang onto the receipt until you're absolutely sure you're happy with the product.
But this is going off topic a bit. Microsoft is still stupid banning non-pirated copies.
I personally agree. The people saying that it's Microsoft's fault or the OP's fault I do not agree with.
Agreeing to use Xbox Live comes with the agreement that you won't play illegitimately sold copies of the game before their release date, I don't really see what grounds you'd have to dispute that.
Except the copy in question wasn't even legally bought - the store never rang it up and there's no receipt. As far as all the systems are concerned, that copy is still supposed to be in a box with an unbroken orange seal.
Indeed, he was implicit.It is the fault of the store. If it was a legit purchase then there would be no need to hide the store name. He is hiding it because he knows it wasn't a legit purchase.
Bullshit. He purchased a product which has a direct revenue stream back to MS, and they punished him for playing it. In no way is the OP in the wrong.
Its a product that wasn't officially released yet. OP was smart enough to go to a mom and pop store purchase a copy under the table but he messed up and played online.
It was officially released in that store, because he bought a copy.
It's not HIS copy. There is no transaction. The store still owns it. Just because you hand money to someone in a retail store doesn't mean you own it. It needs to be put in the system to handle inventory and balance books. Also, what's to stop the associate from pocketing the money and claiming you stole it?
Unless you use cash, every transaction has a history that can be tracked from either the business or your credit card company. If you use cash, you should hang onto the receipt until you're absolutely sure you're happy with the product.
But this is going off topic a bit. Microsoft is still stupid banning non-pirated copies.
Edit: And I'm not blaming him at all. The blame is fully on the store for the sale, and the ban is fully the fault of Microsoft.
Indeed, he was implicit.
People are arguing for the 'average consumer', and I don't believe they even exist in this example. It's true someone might not know the release date of Halo 4, they might use a small store as their normal gaming shop. They go there, they see Halo 4 behind the counter, they ask for it. The sales person gets the game, ready to sell it. At that point, the fault lies on the shop exclusively, the consumer knows, and has no reason to know, anything is wrong. At the point the sales person says "I can't give you a receipt, I'll have to ring it up on Tuesday", if the consumer agrees, they no longer have any claim to being 'innocent'.
So official they didn't give him a receipt.
yeah Fuck that company that just spent over $100 million on a video game I really appreciate. fuck the system man.
Indeed, he was implicit.
People are arguing for the 'average consumer', and I don't believe they even exist in this example. It's true someone might not know the release date of Halo 4, they might use a small store as their normal gaming shop. They go there, they see Halo 4 behind the counter, they ask for it. The sales person gets the game, ready to sell it. At that point, the fault lies on the shop exclusively, the consumer knows, and has no reason to know, anything is wrong. At the point the sales person says "I can't give you a receipt, I'll have to ring it up on Tuesday", if the consumer agrees, they no longer have any claim to being 'innocent'.
A receipt is proof of the purchase, but it does not define ownership.
So if I pirate a game, it's my copy, right? Might be a stupid analogy, but so is saying "possession is nine-tenths of the law".Another bullshit post. It IS his copy. Possession is nine tenths and all that jazz.
Oh dear...
What systems? Tills? Is this a Victorian sweet shop?Let's say the customer purchases it at a smaller shop that doesn't have those systems. It appears Microsoft is banning Halo 4 players indiscriminately other than reviewers. I don't think the burden should be on the consumer to send proof that they purchased the game legally to continue to use their Xbox Live subscription.
But lets be honest, you tried to get away with something shady and it didn't work.
It was officially released in that store, because he bought a copy.
I don't get how people here are throwing blame between Microsoft and the OP--it's the store's fault. MS has every right to ban an account that seems suspect (and I imagine playing fucking Halo 4 early raises a big red flag), and the dude has every right to buy something he sees on shelves. The only person who broke a contract here was the store, which both parties can reasonably blame for inconvenience and wasted resources (time, money, etc.).
Microsoft deserve no blame unless they don't rectify things in a timely manner once the situation is clarified with them; but these things take some time, which the OP has only the store to blame for (unless, of course, he went and asked them for an early copy or something).
There are contracts around the sales of product that must be adhered to.
I wrote a thing about street dates last year
very Australian specific but a bit of it flows to the USA
http://www.kotaku.com.au/2011/10/why-street-date-breaks-are-bad-for-the-games-industry-as-a-whole/
relax. I will take care of it. Your copy is not legitimate - the store efffed up. But you will be unbanned soon.
I don't get how people here are throwing blame between Microsoft and the OP--it's the store's fault. MS has every right to ban an account that seems suspect (and I imagine playing fucking Halo 4 early raises a big red flag), and the dude has every right to buy something he sees on shelves. The only person who broke a contract here was the store, which both parties can reasonably blame for inconvenience and wasted resources (time, money, etc.).
Microsoft deserve no blame unless they don't rectify things in a timely manner once the situation is clarified with them; but these things take some time, which the OP has only the store to blame for (unless, of course, he went and asked them for an early copy or something).
I wanna know more about this: How can you tell based on packaging? Is the disc printed differently from your/343's print-run or what?
Curious how OP got burned on a "non-legit" copy more than him breaking street date.
What? No he didn't. Stop accusing people of bullshit like this. He bought the game because the shop sold it to him early, and truth be told, you'd probably do the same thing if you could.
Hate dumb, accusatory posts like this.
Whatever, Frank got his account unbanned so it doesn't even matter.
I don't get how people here are throwing blame between Microsoft and the OP--it's the store's fault. MS has every right to ban an account that seems suspect (and I imagine playing fucking Halo 4 early raises a big red flag), and the dude has every right to buy something he sees on shelves. The only person who broke a contract here was the store, which both parties can reasonably blame for inconvenience and wasted resources (time, money, etc.).
Microsoft deserve no blame unless they don't rectify things in a timely manner once the situation is clarified with them; but these things take some time, which the OP has only the store to blame for (unless, of course, he went and asked them for an early copy or something).