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Anonymous's avatar
Anonymous
8 years ago

Error 524, my sons sub account on Xbox live is unable to get online

I recently purchased battlefront 2 for my son for his birthday. He has a sub account under my main account on xbox one s. Every time he attempts to play the multiplayer it says he is not signed in and gives error code 524 as the reason. Can ea please fix this issue! There are probably more children who play this game than adults. If those children have smart parents they would supervise the activities their children do online as I do. I have given him full permissions to play any games online without restriction [Do not attempt to bypass the swear filter - CM] Please respond and help get this fixed ea. Many other people’s posts are going unanswered and I’m not going to sit on the phone waiting over an hour for your garbage customer service to do nothing to fix the problem...Please make an effort as he is disappointed in the fact that he can’t play with his friends.

[Do not post in all CAPS. There is no need to SHOUT - CM]

23 Replies

  • Anonymous's avatar
    Anonymous
    8 years ago

    @EA_Darko

    While it's true that EA won't enable child accounts for Battlefront 2 online content, it's entirely untrue that COPPA is the cause or that EA is uniformly enforcing COPPA.  

    1) EA is enforcing child restrictions in a much more Draconian way for Battlefront 2 than it is for other EA titles.  As many have posted, FIFA works just fine.

    2) EA is actively telling people in help to work with Microsoft's parental permissions, while knowing full well that Origin is ignoring those designations for Battlefield 2.

    3) EA isn't actually enforcing COPPA, as you can sign on to EA systems with the exact same child ID information and a different birth date and EA welcomes them with open arms into their online content.

    4) EA is offering a significant portion of their Battlefront 2 value online, while locking out most of their target audience from said online content and offering zero in the way of restitution.  I've seen other posts on AHQ defending this that amount to "read the fine print" and on top of that, the fine print is wrong as there are many kids above COPPA age who cannot access Battlefront 2 due to EA's poor implementation. 

    5) As posted elsewhere in this thread, COPPA is fine with parental permissions, but EA isn't.

    EA is effectively forcing parents out of Microsoft's pretty well-thought-through permissions system if their kids want to play the Star Wars game they got for Christmas.  And they're doing it out of fear of loot box gambling lawsuits specific to Battlefront 2, not out of COPPA requirements.  And they're going out of their way to not state this publicly, instead offering misleading help advice that is wasting a lot of parents' time. 

    More on this in the related Bug Reports thread here: https://answers.ea.com/t5/Bug-Reports/Xbox-Attempt-to-connect-to-online-error-code-524/td-p/6431848/page/6

  • Anonymous's avatar
    Anonymous
    7 years ago

    Folks, if the Gamertag/account receiving error code 524 is for an "underage" account (for a child generally under 13 years of age), I have the solution for fixing the problem: you must "age up" the child's Origin Account.  I have learned there are 2 ways to do this, one which is published but the other that is not readily discussed online (not that I could find).

     

    Option 1: Your child naturally reaches the "age up" age.  Per EA, this is apparently an automatic notice EA provides once a child is of age and logs into their Origin account.  See https://help.ea.com/en-us/help/account/aging-up-an-origin-account-to-an-adult-account/ Your child goes through the age up process, picks an email, and then should be good.

     

    Option 2: You provide evidence to EA that your child is actually of the age to "age up" the Origin account.  To do this, you must first contact the EA Help Desk and create a case number, asking the agent to provide you the case number.  The agent will then give you instructions, which is basically to send an email to DOBverification ATSIGN ea DOT com containing the following:

    - A picture of a legal document showing the child's date of birth (proving the child is 13 years old or older in the U.S., for example)

    - Information that will help EA find the account (Origin Name, Gamertag, etc.)

    - Your help desk case number

    - The agent didn't ask for this in the instructions, but I would provide them your child's email address that you want associated to the child's aged up Origin account.

    Once EA has this information, they will update the child's date of birth on their Origin account and then send the child an email with instructions to complete the age-up process.

     

    I did option #2 above with my son by submitting a picture of a birth certificate.  I had originally set up my son's Origin account with the wrong birthday year (accidentally making him younger), so providing a birth certificate and making the correction was relatively easy.  For those of you whose child is not yet of age but you want to age up their account, I didn't see a different avenue for getting an exception or approving aging up; it seems you must submit documentation showing your child is older.

     

    For reference, here's an EA article regarding the underage account policy by country for children based on their ages: https://help.ea.com/en-us/help/account/online-access-for-child-accounts/#agerequirements.

     

    One additional note: if you still want your child's Xbox Gamertag to have some child/family privacy restrictions or content restrictions after you age up your child's Origin account, you can apparently do this with no problem.  I aged up my son's account but still restricted content to games up to 13 years, he can only chat with Friends, can't share videos, etc.  Once you get the Origin account aged up, it doesn't seem to be impacted by Xbox parental restrictions.

     

    I hope this helps!

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