They have an arbitration clause so you cant take them to court in the US, and you cant prove that you didn't cheat in arbitration because they own the data that they are using to determine that you cheated and its against their policy to disclose.
So when you agree to their terms of service, you are effectively agreeing that you only own the game at their sole discretion and they can legally revoke access for no reason at any time. Which is why they'll never see another dollar from me.
That said, everybody outside of the US should look into legal action. Chatgpt says their arbitration clause might be unenforceable due to stricter consumer protection laws in the EU, Canada, Australia, etc.