this post was submitted on 25 Dec 2024
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What i don't get is how morale is involved in getting a refund on a non working product? For steam games, i haven't seen this specific case.
The customer knew the item would be defective and purchased anyway because they know they could refund it at no cost of their own. But as pointed out in our sibling thread, there are costs produced by refunds, which someone has to pay. Therefore the buyer made the choice to hurt these other parties. That’s where the moral comes in.
The majority of non-Linux games work just fine in Linux using Proton. The customer doesn't "know" until they are able to test it.
There are plenty of Windows games that don't work on Windows due to incompatible hardware, system requirements that are not met, or any number of other machine specific issues. Are those returns immoral also?
Let’s look at it from the opposite side: You order a washing machine from Japan knowing full well that the plug is incompatible with your socket. Is it justifiable request a refund because “it doesn’t work”?
Who gets a washing machine shipped from Japan just to return it? It's not like you're turning a profit from returning. This is just wasting time, same as buying a game for the express purpose of returning it. Nobody does that.
If the majority of Japanese washing machines work with an adapter that provides the correct power requirements (ie proton) then yes.