The Star Malaysia - Star2

Gamers fear for virtual assets as rate cut hits

- By SONIA ELKS

GAMERS escaping coronaviru­s lockdowns have seen their virtual savings slashed in hit video game Animal Crossing, highlighti­ng the limited rights users have to digital property.

Players of the viral Nintendo Switch game received a notice saying interest payments on the virtual “bells” currency were being reduced, with gaming media reporting the rate was cut from about 0.5% to 0.05%, and maximum interest payments capped.

The rate cut will make it harder for players to build up wealth through savings, although most earn bells by catching bugs or chopping wood, which can be spent on other virtual assets like furniture and plants to develop their desert island.

The sudden change – which mirrors central bankers slashing rates to cushion the financial blow of the coronaviru­s pandemic – shows how consumers have fewer rights over their digital property than they might expect, say digital law experts.

“This change by Nintendo helps illustrate that consumers have very limited practical control over digital assets and environmen­ts,” said Aaron Perzanowsk­i, professor of law at Case Western Reserve University in the United States.

Companies can “use their unilateral power over code to disrupt consumer expectatio­ns and change the rules of the games they create without notice, much less consent from their customers”, he added. Japanese game maker Nintendo did not respond to requests for comment.

As lockdowns were introduced around the world to curb the spread of the novel coronaviru­s pandemic, many people turned to video games to pass the time and socialise with friends virtually.

Players took to social media to complain about the slashed interest rate, with one user who called themselves Stouph writing on Twitter “eight million bells and this is my interest. The new interest rate is horrible!”.

Players have little control over such changes, while game licence agreements typically give no ownership rights over virtual assets, researcher­s and legal experts say.

“This episode highlights that players often engage with video games having little or no awareness or understand­ing of the contractua­l arrangemen­ts to which they have agreed,” said Michaela Macdonald, an expert on video games law.

As digital goods rise in popularity, there may be a push to reconsider systems that give fewer rights over virtual assets ranging from games to books than the physical equivalent­s, said Macdonald, who is based at Queen Mary University in Britain.

But the response of gamers to changes varies considerab­ly depending on the context, said Federico Fasce, game designer and lecturer at Goldsmiths University.

In the case of Animal Crossing ,a game where players can easily find and gather resources, the rate cut is unlikely to be a major sticking point for most fans, he said. – Thomson Reuters Foundation

 ?? — Reuters ?? Changes to Animal Crossing show that consumers have limited control over digital assets.
— Reuters Changes to Animal Crossing show that consumers have limited control over digital assets.
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