Forum Discussion
The Battlefield 6 End User License Agreement states:
EA may retire online features after 30 days notice at ea.com/service-updates.
By removing the feature in a patch without warning they broke their own EULA. That was the grounds that I requested a refund via Steam. However Steam declined my refund request as I had "played over the minimum number of hours".
This decision broke Australian Consumer Law as an advertised service was altered, meaning the product could not be used for the intended purpose that it was purchased for. I raised this with Steam and it was still declined. Steam have been fined for this practice previously:
People talk about this game being a "bait and switch". Honestly, what they have done is actually illegal in my country.
They are losing long term fans and customers all because they don't want a few people enjoying themselves in solo servers. Goodbye Battlefield, thanks for the good memories since 2002.