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翻訳の問題を報告
Steam has by far the best refund policy in gaming.
Furthermore, you would have gotten the refund if you had been within the requirements of the purchase date. You weren't. Which is why you didn't mention it until much later in the thread, because you knew you had no argument.
It doesn't matter that you only played for 6 minutes, did you own the game longer than 2 weeks? Yes.
You must meet both requirements, not just one. You claim to be an adult or so I thought in the thread, so this should not be this difficult for you to understand. Both requirements, not just one.
Saying that they took your money implies that you got nothing in return. You still have the game.
Its pretty simple, you don't like the ruleset by which the game (digital copies) is played. That's fine, different people got different opinions. I, for exapel, ♥♥♥♥♥♥♥ hate football. I don't demand the rules to change, I simply don't play/watch it. Same here. If you don't like the ruleset of digital copies, stick to physical copies, problem solved.
Refund policies - Take your pick.
1) Steam - Within two weeks of purchase and with less than two hours of playtime
2) Epic - Games and products are eligible for refund within 14 days of purchase. However, you must have less than 2 hours of runtime on record.
3) EA Play - Whichever comes first.
a) Within 24 hours after you first launch the game.
b) Within 14 days from the day you bought it, if you have not launched the game.
c) Within 14 days from the release date if you pre-ordered the game, if you haven't launched it yet.
4) Ubisoft - You can request a refund for a digital order within 14 days of your purchase, as long as the content has not been launched.
5) Blizzard - The game is newly purchased within the last 3 days. You haven't started the game; if the game has been played at all it won't qualify for a refund.
6) GOG - starting now, you can get a full refund up to 30 days after purchasing a product, even if you downloaded, launched, and played it. That's it. (Open to abuse, they monitor for abuse as do all PC stores).
GOG - https://ibb.co/ZzXPMwv
Steam's refund policy does and those others were posted for comparison.
Steam - "WITHIN" two weeks of purchase "AND" with "LESS" than two hours of playtime
Epic would deny you as they have the same policy.
Without completely decimating the sales of a game by letting people just throw their copies around to others on a whim, or letting people play a game and then getting a full refund just because they can, I mean.
Refunds aren't an entitlement, 2 hours within 2 weeks is a compromise to try and fit in the majority of games fairly. There are games which can be finished in under 2 hours, there are games that you might spend 2 hours in a character creation screen.
Steam's refunds specifically are for people who find their game doesn't work on their system, or it's not what they expected. It's not meant to be used to trial games, it's not meant to be used to make your money back at a later date.
Take Mr. Indie Dev as an example.
Most of his game sales will be within the first few days of release, after which they will drop off significantly, maybe a couple a day.
He will boost sales a while later by having limited time discounts and do that usually during sales periods.
If people could just swap/sell their digital licenses, Mr. Indie Dev gets diddly squat, he will never make another sale. The only sales being made are for the preowned licenses as people undercut one another and devalue his game to the point of worthlessness.
Why doesn't this happen with physical discs, you may ask? A few reasons.
1) It requires physically having the media, it's not just a click of a button. If I wanted to sell a PS5 game, I'd need to either make the effort of an eBay listing, hope someone I know wants to buy, or suffer the terrible trade-in value from somewhere like Gamestop.
2) Games released physically usually come from major publishers and only when they anticipate enough demand to make it worth doing.
3) If you're buying as part of a collection, or you want to guarantee everything is alright, you'd buy new to avoid damaged boxes, scratched discs etc. Licenses have no condition attribute.
Digital goods are consumables.
It's like asking for a refund for a sandwich after eating it. You're not entitled to it, but the clerk might give you a refund depending on the circumstances, but it's not a way for you to get a free lunch every day.