@CherryChomps@michaualtington Always reminding me that players died when making mistakes and team play was even more mandatory to win a fight. Yeah this is overwatch baby
The Stop Killing Games campaign just had one of its biggest moments in the European Parliament.
During a debate in Strasbourg, many Members of the European Parliament spoke in support of better consumer rights for video games. Most speakers agreed that companies should not be able to shut down games that people had already paid for.
Support came from several political groups, including the Greens, Renew Europe, S&D, The Left, and even some EPP members
Many MEPs said games should be treated more like products than temporary online services. They argued that buyers should not lose access just because a company ends support or shifts players to a newer title.
Some MEPs criticized the European Commission for not taking stronger action. There are concerns it may issue only a non-binding statement instead of new laws.
The debate showed that Stop Killing Games is now being taken seriously at the highest political level in Europe.
The discussion is no longer only about gaming but also about digital ownership, consumer rights, and companies’ obligations after purchase.
@SamTheLucioFan I wish that at the very least the 2021-2022 version of the game remained playable as a game mode in arcade. I always like going back and playing these modes
Gabe Newell was right that interactivity is the definition of fun.
This realistically took a single dev maybe a day to code, but it's impressive because the game respects your interaction.