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Berhasil melewati tantangan "Undang-Undang Perlindungan Permainan" California: Penerbit harus "mengembalikan dana penuh" atau mempertahankan "versi offline independen" sebelum menghentikan layanan
California “Protect Our Games Act” (AB 1921) has passed through the appropriations committee with a vote of 11 to 2, just one step away from a full legislative vote. The bill mandates game publishers to provide full refunds before discontinuing service or to release an independently operable offline version, applicable to all paid games launched in California after January 1, 2027.
(Background: Brother Magji joins the Taiwanese version of “Shark Tank” as a shark investor)
(Additional background: Vitalik criticizes the EU Digital Services Act “Zero Space” governance: a free society must tolerate dissent and not head down the road of online authoritarianism)
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California’s legislature is rewriting the rules of the digital game lifecycle. The “Protect Our Games Act” (AB 1921) passed the California appropriations committee in mid-May with 11 to 2 votes, marking an important milestone after passing the Privacy and Consumer Protection Committee and the Judiciary Committee.
The bill will next be sent for a full legislative vote, and if approved, it will become law.
Core of the bill: Refund or offline version, choose one
According to the current version, the bill sets two options for “discontinuing online game services” publishers:
Additionally, publishers must notify players at least 60 days in advance before stopping “services necessary for normal game use.”
Scope of application: Paid only, excluding subscription models
The bill includes two exemptions:
If the bill passes smoothly, the timeline is: Starting January 1, 2027, all paid games launched in California must comply.
Behind the push: Stop Killing Games
One of the behind-the-scenes advocates of the bill is the UK player advocacy organization Stop Killing Games (SKG). The organization was founded after Ubisoft announced the closure of the online racing game “The Crew” in 2024, aiming to prevent situations where players buy a game only to be unable to play due to server shutdowns.
SKG leader Monitz Katzner wrote on Reddit: “Just before Christmas, when I flew to the US to help prepare SKG-US, I never imagined we could get this far so quickly.”
The bill was initially proposed by California Assemblymember Chris Ward, and SKG stated they had “assisted in drafting” the bill.
ESA: Cost pressures may harm developers
However, the lobbying organization representing major game publishers, the Entertainment Software Association (ESA), explicitly opposes the bill.
ESA warns that if laws force publishers to release offline versions, the related development and maintenance costs could impose heavy burdens on small and medium-sized game developers, potentially affecting overall industry investment willingness.
However, advocates counter that products purchased with real money by players should not “disappear into thin air” just because publishers decide to shut down servers. The design logic of the bill is similar to general consumer protection laws: purchased products must be usable.
Currently, the bill is in the full legislative vote stage. If California leads in legislation, it could set a precedent for consumer protection of digital products in other states and across the US.