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maccardtoday at 7:50 AM1 replyview on HN

> 90% of games have no online conponent, and run in perpetuity after purchase

So those games are unaffected regardless of this law.

> This only affects AAA game studios that produce micro transaction slop and live services. The exact same that are lobbying against any sort of regulation.

F2P live service games are specifically excluded from this though, which presumably is what you mean by micro transaction slop. This affects every game, from a 1 man developer who uses steam for p2p all the way up to activision and call of duty. The groups hit hardest by this are going to be small-medium developers who are just trying to build a game, not Ubisoft (who are the reason for instigating this whole thing).


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skotobazatoday at 7:56 AM

> The groups hit hardest by this are going to be small-medium developers who are just trying to build a game

How so? Smaller developers don't usually build games that require huge online components that will be hard to release to the public. That's mostly AAA publishers that do so (at least I can't remember the opposite from the top of my head).

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