• Justagamer
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      310 hours ago

      The important data I’d want out of this is how much money went down if younger kids couldn’t get addicted.

      Just to see how much they could bank off of giving kids addictive personalities for the future.

  • @[email protected]
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    581 day ago

    Good. Now do the same to the major triple A studios attaching loot boxes to every sports game and battle royale. Why the fuck start with Mihoyo?

    • L3ft_F13ld!
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      23 hours ago

      Probably got put on their radar by people complaining about the Chinese gacha game being too popular or something. Those same people complain much less about their manly sports/shooting games made in the good ol’ United States of 'Murica. Even though they have similar predatory mechanics.

  • @[email protected]
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    691 day ago

    Ughh. The selective enforcement is maddening, both with this and TikTok. So much of the filed complaint especially applies to Roblox, but it’s clear that we’re only interested in protecting our consumers when it really means chipping away at a foreign rival’s burgeoning soft power.

    • مهما طال الليل
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      818 hours ago

      Yes it maybe selective and hypocritical but it also sets precedent. Other companies can be held accountable more easily now.

    • danny801
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      201 day ago

      That’s fine. Gotta start somewhere

        • @SoftTeeth
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          151 day ago

          Yeah Lina Khan is fired the second Trump takes office, and she’s the one opening up all these antitrust suits

  • @[email protected]
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    971 day ago

    And millions of children cried out for their waifus.

    (This is good: I play and enjoy Genshin but they’re using every single psychological trick to get you to spend money to gamble and that kind of shameless shit shouldn’t be put in front of children who don’t have sufficient experience and developmental time to not get totally taken.)

    • @[email protected]
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      701 day ago

      Yeah, there’s a reason we don’t let children into casinos. Putting cute cartoons in the casino on their phone just makes it worse, if anything.

      • @[email protected]
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        121 day ago

        this should have to go through the same regulations as casinos. although that would probably just mean no official release or support for Canadians

    • @MothmanDelorian
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      81 day ago

      I never played Genshin but I did check out ZZZ for a minute. The gacha element was just too intense and it reminded me of games from 15+ years ago that used similar mechanics.

      • @asmoranomar
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        181 day ago

        Yes. They are bigger. It sends a message to the entire predatory ecosystem. Which would not happen if they went for a smaller Gacha game.

        Other than that, no, let’s give them fines too.

      • @[email protected]
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        51 day ago

        I don’t think so, no. At least nothing I’ve noticed, but they’re also not being any better than any other gacha game, either.

  • @ocassionallyaduck
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    281 day ago

    20 mil is peanuts. Selling shit to children for as long as you can is worth way more. FTC has proven that exploiting kids with gambling mechanics is just good business.

  • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️
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    391 day ago

    'Member when Kyle’s Mom freaked the fuck out and tried to ban Pokémon Red and Blue because they “depicted gambling” in the game corner, which had no links to the outside world and could not be fed with real money in any capacity, was completely contained within the monochrome screen on your Gameboy, and could be save scummed anyway? Pepperidge Farm 'members.

    My, how far the bullshit has come.

    Anyway, 16 is sure a funny way to spell 18. Why the hell is the age requirement 16 when you can’t buy a lottery ticket until you’re 18 and in most places you can’t enter a casino until you’re 21? It’s the same thing.

    Lootboxes is gambling. So are gacha pulls, and doubly so for both of the above when they can be fueled with real world money. People who are not adults should not be enabled to gamble.

    • @[email protected]
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      915 hours ago

      See the tweet from Balatro’s developer:

      Since PEGI gave us an 18+ rating for having evil playing cards maybe I should add microtransactions/loot boxes/real gambling to lower that rating to 3+ like EA sports FC

    • @gibmiser
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      51 day ago

      Best way to train new gamblers

  • @[email protected]
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    1 day ago

    20 mil isn’t that much, but this is good news. Hopefully this sets a precedent for other manipulative gacha games.

    • @Wade
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      171 day ago

      Genshin alone made over 700 mil last year, this is just cost of doing business for them

        • 🔍🦘🛎
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          111 hours ago

          Genshin is in year 5, so it’s still an impressive number. Plus they have 3 other live service games running concurrently (one released this past July)

  • @TommySoda
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    As much as I like putting limitations on lootboxes or banning them out right, I’ve seen what developers do when they can’t use lootboxes. $20 to $30 “micro” transactions with predatory menus and game mechanics that make you feel bad for not owning the latest hotness. They will do anything to make that microtransaction money regardless. They’ll just take advantage of a different part of your brain.

    • @SoftTeeth
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      131 day ago

      Then ban that shit too

      We shouldn’t allow corporations to psychology manipulate children.

      • @[email protected]
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        -151 day ago

        We shouldn’t allow children online or playing video games. If we’re going full jack Thompson, let’s go full jack Thompson. No one under 21 gets Internet or games.

        • @SoftTeeth
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          1 day ago

          Playing games is different than manipulating money out of minors.

          You know that too

            • @Duamerthrax
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              101 day ago

              You could just sell the game at a flat cost. You know, like they use to and still do. If you want a “Live Service” game, just sell a DLC/Expansion Pack every few months.

              • @[email protected]
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                -101 day ago

                That would still be taking money from kids. One would assume marketing is involved so that’s tricking kids into making a purchase.

                My solution is simply stop letting kids have video games. If we want to censor things, let’s censor them.

                • Elevator7009
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                  18 hours ago

                  Most people consider lootbox/gacha predatory and regular advertising a necessary evil. Regular advertising is often manipulative too, but most people consider lootbox/gacha to be more so, especially because of the addictive gambling mechanics it uses that regular advertising doesn’t. Also, most people are used to advertising, and putting lootboxes/gacha in video games is something I am assuming most Lemmy posters can remember there being a controversy over before microtransactions became The New Normal.

                • @Duamerthrax
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                  51 day ago

                  No. That would be taking money from the parents when they purchase the game. The kids would only be playing the game and so long as there’s no store front in the game, there’s no problem.

                  Would you ban kids from riding bicycles because stores sell them?

  • Chozo
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    -121 day ago

    I’m confused. I’ve played Genshin, and I don’t remember any sort of loot box system in the game. There’s a gacha system which seems to be what the article keeps referring to, but that’s very different from what I think the average user considers a “loot box”.

    • @[email protected]
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      331 day ago

      You’re gonna need to explain what you think the difference is, because most people think they’re synonymous

      • TheTechnician27
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        1 day ago

        There isn’t a meaningful difference; gachas are just a subset of lootboxes, and anybody claiming otherwise is a player lying to themselves or is a game publisher defending themselves from these predatory practices.

        • 🔍🦘🛎
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          11 hours ago

          Yup, it doesn’t make a difference if you pay for:

          • a box containing random items (Overwatch 1)
          • a key to open boxes you find for free (Guild Wars 2)
          • an incubator to hatch an egg with a random creature (Pokemon GO)
          • a wish to reward a random character but there’s a guarantee after 80 wishes to get one exact character (Genshin Impact)
      • Chozo
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        101 day ago

        I feel like the difference is the loot “box”, itself. Granted, I’ve not played any loot box games since Team Fortress 2, but in that game the box was an actual inventory item you could store and open whenever you wanted, and those items would always be from the same pool.

        With Genshin, you’re basically just pulling from a singular, infinite loot box that rotates its reward pool. So you can’t, as a player, decide to open a Year 1 item when it’s not in the current rotation.

        It’s a small difference, but I feel like that’s why we have separate terminology for “gacha” and “loot box” games.

        • LiveLM
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          181 day ago

          My apologies if I’m getting this wrong, as I don’t play Gacha games, but isn’t that worse?
          As in, if the players know that a certain reward they’re trying to get will be rotated out soon, won’t that drive up the FOMO even more?

          • Chozo
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            21 day ago

            My apologies if I’m getting this wrong, as I don’t play Gacha games, but isn’t that worse?

            It depends. I’m not sure how current loot box games handle it, but with most gacha games, there are determined odds for the prizes, so they have a “pity” system. So after a certain amount of pulls, you’re always guaranteed to get the top reward. RNG will make it so that you’ll typically pull all the way to nearly the end of that pity timer before you get the top reward, but you’ll eventually get it.

            I’m not sure if traditional loot “boxes” have such a protection in place. I dunno if it’s any better or worse since they’re both pretty manipulative tactics, but it’s different.

            • @[email protected]
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              1 day ago

              not all gacha games have a pity system, and a pity system is not part of the definition of a gacha game. For example, Puzzle and Dragons, one of the first major gacha games on mobile, whose gachapon system is literally modeled off a gachapon machine, does not have a pity system. It’s not different. Having a pity system is not a requirement for being a gacha. For example, Fate Grand Order for the longest time, did not have a pity system. You would not suddenly call it a gacha game after it got a pity system, as it was already one before hand.

    • @halcyoncmdr
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      201 day ago

      Gacha is a type of loot box.

      You aren’t purchasing a specific item when you spend money. If there’s any sort of chance involved with that purchase it’s a loot box.

      • @AppaYipYip
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        01 day ago

        As an old person who plays Genshin Impact, the “character banners” are 100% loot boxes. They have a pity system which guarantees a five star character after 100 “wishes” but even then it may not be the character you wanted. You might have to “wish” up to 200 times to get the five star character you are “wishing” for on the banner. Since you are not buying the character out right and gambling to get them it’s a loot box.

        For anyone who doesn’t play “character banners” are a limited run (3 weeks) of a five star character that you can only get from the banner. “Wishes” are like rolls for the character. Each wish you lose gives you either a weapon (3 star/practically useless in game) and every 10 wishes gurantees a four star weapon or four star character.

        • Tywèle [she|her]
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          116 hours ago

          Hard pity is at 90 wishes and soft pity starts at 75 (which means that the chance to get a 5 star increases significantly with each additional wish past that point). Getting to hard pity almost never happens.

        • @halcyoncmdr
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          21 day ago

          As a person that have played Genshin since the launch. Those are all loot boxes. Just because it’s limited or has a pity system, that doesn’t change the fact. It just limits the results or gives you a guarantee

          If you are taking a chance at all to get something from a list of items, as opposed to selecting a specific item to buy, IT IS A LOOT BOX.

          The specifics of limits or pity systems, or guarantees after X amount do not matter. The slot machines in Vegas have a fixed and regulated chance to payout as well, it’s still gambling.

    • @[email protected]
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      321 hours ago

      The presentation is different, but the core problem that the FTC is targeting is the same: spending real money to gamble on artificial digital goods.

    • @[email protected]
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      91 day ago

      a gachapon, the system gacha is named after, its litterally a form of a lootbox. you know, those machines found in places where you place tokens to vend out a random goodie?