This is one of those rare times when government regulations should step in. If licenses are allowed to expire for "purchases" digital content, then the seller should be required to provide a refund or credit for the original cost paid. I've been buying primarily digital content for over a decade with the knowledge it could be removed and for the most part, I still can access TV shows I bought on my Xbox 360 but there are a few gaps. Most noticeably WWE 2K15 on Xbox One completely disappeared from my game library and despite providing both Xbox and 2K with my purchase information, after 4 months of back and forth finger pointing I gave up and bought a used disk. At least it still works with backwards compatibility on my Series X. At no point was I notified my purchased content would not be available or was offered a refund or credit for the price I paid.
@GetFitWithJared @Films_At_Home @ModernVintageG I was just gonna ask if they offered a refund. I doubt they would
@GetFitWithJared @Films_At_Home @ModernVintageG Nope. I love when those things happens. Makes those "I don't need physical media because I always have internet" realize how they don't own anything they buy on digital
@GetFitWithJared @Films_At_Home @ModernVintageG Same with me and Marvel vs Capcom 2, I got the Arcade 1 Up now, but obviously takes way more room than my PS3 😂
@GetFitWithJared @Films_At_Home @ModernVintageG Agreed. They need to provide a partial refund. "Purchase" means ownership, not rental. If they revoke access, that's not ownership.
@GetFitWithJared @Films_At_Home @ModernVintageG My heart aches for Jarod who can no longer play WWE 2K15