Summary

  • Two gamers from California are suing The Crew publisher Ubisoft for shutting down the game's servers earlier this year, making the game unplayable.
  • This lawsuit argues that Ubisoft misled customers about game ownership, hiding the fact that customers were buying licenses for the title, rather than the full game.
  • The plaintiffs are hoping to expand the suit into a class action, and are demanding monetary relief and damages for impacted players,

The Crew was rather unceremꦛoniously shut down earlier this year, as Ubisoft took the game's servers offline, rendering the game💟 unplayable for potential b﷽uyers and existing owners. Ubisoft claimed the game had to be shut down due to "server infrastructure and licensing constraints", but it was still a move that proved very unpopular among gamers, and while The Crew may not have a huge fanbase, it has a very loyal and passionate one.

Ever since The Crew was shut down, fans of the game have been working to bring it back to life with an unofficial offline mode, 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:whiꦺch has very steadily been making pr💜ogress. Despite that progress, it's very clear that fans have held a major gr🐼udge🗹 against Ubisoft for shutting it down in the first place, and now two fans of the series have decided to try and sue Ubisoft for fraud.

The Crew Fans Are Attempting To Sue Ubisoft Over Shutdown

Four cars of varying sizes and colour driving though a shallow stream in The Crew

, these two fans are from California, against Ubisoft on November 4, claiming that the "complete destruction" of The Crew had rendered it unplayable and has "barred consumer' access to the product they paid for". Furthermore, the lawsuit claims that Ubisoft has wronged customers by not providing an offline mode to enjoy the game in single-player, like it's doing with bo𝕴th The Crew 2 and Motorfest.

"Imagine you buy a pinball machine, and years later, you enter your den to go play it, only to discover that all the paddles are missing, the pinball and bumpers are gone, and the monitor that proudly displayed your unassaila൲ble high score is removed."

The lawsuit also claims that Ubisoft "duped" consumers in two ways, the first claim being that Ubisoft deliberately hid the fact that customers were buying a license for the game rather than owning it outright. This has been a relatively frequent topic of discussion in the industry, 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:f🌱ollowing the passing of a law in California that will see digital storefronts forced toꩲ tell customers wh♛ether they're buying a game, or just its license.

Secondly, this lawsuit also claims🗹 that Ubisoft falsely represented The Crew by allowing fans to believe the game was physically on the disc or digital files they were purchasing, when in reality the game "resided on remote servers". Both plaintiffs claim they purchased the game under the impression that t♔hey paid to own the game, rather than just the license, and that they wouldn't have purchased The Crew "on the same terms" if they knew it was going to be delisted.

Right now, the lawsuit only has two plaintiffs, but they're hoping the courts will approve the lawsuit as a class action, meaning anyone who bought The Crew and couldn't get a refund when the servers shut down co🌳uld join in. Both pl⭕aintiffs are asking for monetary relief and damages for people impacted by the server shutdown, but we'll have to wait and see whether this lawsuit has the potential to go any further.

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