He's not entitled from anything from you, nor was he saying he was. It was a manner of speech, chill.Hateren47 said:He is not entitled to anything from me, right? I don't know if you're an expert on EU law, but if I (an EU citizen in an EU member state) order a pizza on just-eat.dk (restaurants sign up and sell food of already questionable quality there and Just-Eat takes a 10% cut), and I am not satisfied with my meal and want a 100% refund, I'm entitled to it? And who should reimburse me. The pizzeria or Just-Eat? The pizza is right here, untouched and in the original packaging.
It's not that I want to defend bad business practice or that fastfood and digital PC game licenses are ecxactly the same. But they are similar in the sense that they are worthless once sold and that Steam and Just-Eat just provides the platform and takes their cut. In my experience Steam is cheaper than Just-Eat as well.
Yes of course everybody's rights should be protected, but you can't sell PC software like you sell PC hardware. It has to be under different terms or future computers will have to be cartridge based (for access speed) and you can buy and resell your software cartridge and everything exists in finite amounts. That is just not a view I want to support. It's gonna suck. And the EU is wrong in this case if it is indeed as you say.
I'm not sure where all these analogies with food are coming from, because they're different things altogether, but ok I'll bite. If you order a pizza caprese via that site (which I don't know btw, but there are different ones here) and a pizza caprese is delivered to your home in time, but you don't like the taste. Then no you can't ask for a refund.
Why not?
Because when you ordered the pizza caprese from the site, you were only agreeing to a service within certain limits. The seller agreed to deliver the pizza to your home within time X, it would be a pizza type Y from producer Z. If the site fulfilled all those requirements, then they adequately took care of their part of the agreement, there's nothing about your personal preference in there, except that the specified food must be delivered in a timely fashion.
But if your pizza you ordered from that site was delivered stone cold, half eaten, a day later, or it wasn't a caprese at all. Would you then have the right to refuse payment? Damn right you would.
That's the whole deal with some games on Steam: they promise this and that service and even go out of their way to paint a completely false picture of what their game actually is. Then when people buy it and want their money back they're regarded as the only responsible party. Sorry no way, that's not how it works.
About the EU part: this is where you need to stop comparing with food. Food is a different kind of goods or service in itself legally (it degrades etc.).
What the EU does is to provide consumer protection through various legislation. Companies on the other hand try to hide behind various "Terms of Use" and "EULA's". In the end, the only thing that counts is the law.
And under that law, you have the right to cancel your purchase within 7 working days and receive a refund within 30 days.