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No joke, HopFrog just announced on their discord that the multiplayer update is cancelled, and is offering refunds for anyone that bought the game under the expectation for multiplayer in the future.
If you are a company like Steam/Hopfrog/Humble Games - you have to obey to consumer rights/laws in the country you are providing your services in. Even if anything in the end of user license agreement (EULA in short) or any other regulation that you agreed to, while signing up on Steam; states otherwise, you still can get a refund if laws in your country say so (laws have "tiers" and in-building school regulations are less important than law act, that's also less important than let's say - constitution. Any part of the law that doesnt fully support the higher "tier" of laws, it's not valid)
The questions is (and reason why 99% of people don't do that):
Is 16 euro worth going through all the trouble with refunding the game that way? If you can't do it via email with your local consumer ombudsman, it's not worth the hassle
I was answered by a bot posing as a human and it told me exactly what I put in.
Do you owe me a VR system?