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The Monexus
Vol. I · No. 165
Sunday, 14 June 2026
Saturday Ed.
Updated 09:44 UTC
  • UTC09:44
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← The MonexusCulture

EU lawmakers urge Brussels to legislate against the killing of paid-for video games

MEPs from across the political spectrum want the European Commission to guarantee that paying for a video game buys more than a revocable licence — a question that has sat awkwardly between copyright and contract law for years.

A cross-party group of members of the European Parliament has asked the European Commission to put forward legislation guaranteeing that consumers retain meaningful rights over the video games they pay for, in a letter circulated on 9 June 2026 and first reported by the political network Pirat_Nation. The signatories — drawn from several political groups inside the chamber — frame the request as a response to a string of high-profile shutdowns and store delistings that have rendered legally purchased games unplayable, sometimes within months of a customer handing over the money.

The letter lands at a moment when the gap between what consumers believe they have bought and what the law says they have actually licensed is no longer a niche complaint. In April 2026, Ubisoft confirmed the closure of its online services for older titles including Anno 1800 and The Crew, a motor racing game whose servers were switched off in 2024 leaving paying customers unable to launch a product they had bought outright. The Crew case in particular became a reference point for critics, because the title was advertised and sold as a single-purchase product, not as a subscription. Ubisoft offered affected players a free copy of The Crew 2; consumer organisations across Europe argued that the gesture did not address the underlying legal problem.

The legal terrain

The complaint is not new, but its framing has hardened. Under the bloc's existing digital-rules architecture, the 2019 Copyright in the Digital Single Market Directive (DSM) and the 2023 Data Act together create a partial, fragmented picture. The DSM introduced a narrow resale right for digital content in 2019 that member states chose not to extend to software delivered with a licence rather than transferred outright. The Data Act obliged certain platform operators to enable switching between cloud services, but it was written with enterprise customers in mind and did not tackle consumer-facing media.

The parliamentary letter argues that this patchwork is no longer adequate. It calls on the Commission to assess whether existing rules — and, if necessary, new legislation — can guarantee that a paid-for copy of a game cannot be unilaterally rendered unplayable by the publisher, and to clarify whether the loss of access constitutes a breach of contract, a defective product under consumer law, or something else entirely. The signatories want a clear answer to a question most consumers assume they already know: when you pay sixty euros for a game, what do you own?

The industry's counter-argument

Game publishers, organised through bodies such as ISFE, the European trade association whose members include Ubisoft, Electronic Arts, Activision Blizzard and Take-Two, have pushed back against the framing for years. Their position, repeated in submissions to EU consultations, is straightforward: an online game is not a static file but a service. The software on a player's console is only one part of an experience that includes servers, matchmaking, anti-cheat infrastructure, and ongoing content updates — all of which cost money to run and which the publisher is best placed to manage.

The industry also points to a countervailing trend that the letter's signatories rarely acknowledge. Cloud-based subscription catalogues such as Game Pass and PlayStation Plus have grown rapidly across Europe, and the major platforms now commit to long-term server support for marquee first-party titles precisely because the licence-to-service model allows publishers to amortise running costs across a paying subscriber base. In that view, the choice is not between ownership and rental in the abstract, but between a 2014-style disc-in-a-box that the publisher has no commercial reason to maintain, and a 2026-style service that the same publisher is financially invested in keeping alive. The letter's demand that publishers guarantee indefinite access to every paid-for title sits uneasily with the industry's argument that doing so would, in effect, convert every product into a perpetual, no-fee obligation.

A structural question hiding in plain sight

What makes the European debate distinctive is not that European consumers are more aggrieved than American or Japanese ones, but that the EU is the only major jurisdiction with a plausible institutional pathway to do something about it. The Commission's enforcement of the Digital Markets Act, and its parallel work on a forthcoming European Fairness Act, have trained Brussels regulators to think about digital products as services that may carry obligations beyond whatever the end-user licence agreement happens to say. A letter signed by MEPs from several groups is, in that sense, an invitation to extend an existing line of thinking rather than to invent a new one.

The Commission has not yet committed to a timeline. The letter asks for a legislative proposal, but EU processes mean that any bill would face a multi-year journey through Parliament and Council, and would likely meet intense lobbying from publishers, console makers, and platform operators. Consumer groups across the bloc — including the European Consumer Organisation BEUC, which has tracked The Crew-style shutdowns since 2024 — will probably frame any eventual legislation as a test of whether the Commission's much-vaunted digital strategy can deliver for ordinary buyers, not just for the gatekeeper platforms named in the DMA.

Stakes and uncertainties

The most concrete stake is also the most boring: who pays for server time, and for how long, when a publisher decides a title is no longer commercially viable. The most abstract stake is whether European law will, over the next decade, treat digital entertainment as a category of goods subject to ordinary consumer-protection logic, or as a category of licences that consumers effectively rent. Between those poles sit practical questions — about disclosure, about end-of-life notice periods, about offline modes, about whether local copies can be legally preserved after servers shut down — that the letter does not yet resolve but that any serious legislative text would have to.

What remains genuinely uncertain is the appetite inside the Commission. Commissioners have been broadly sympathetic to consumer-rights arguments in adjacent digital files, but the videogames sector has so far been treated as a sub-case of the broader audiovisual and platform debate rather than as a frontier in its own right. The letter's cross-party sponsorship is a signal that MEPs believe the file can travel, but the outcome is far from settled.

How Monexus framed this: the wire coverage to date has largely reported the letter as a story about the videogames industry. The more revealing read is that it is also a stress test of Europe's post-DMA posture: a question about whether the bloc's digital-rule-building is, in practice, willing to tell publishers what they can and cannot do with the products they sell to the public.

Wire provenance

This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:

  • https://t.me/pirat_nation
  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Crew_(video_game)
  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Directive_on_Copyright_in_the_Digital_Single_Market
© 2026 Monexus Media · reported from the wire