this post was submitted on 18 Aug 2023
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You're pretty misinformed here. EA (or rather the internal studio, Respawn) had to include the EasyAnticheat
.so
file (which is specifically designed to allow EasyAnticheat to function under Linux --.so
files are the Linux equivalent of Windows.dll
s) in their Apex Legends builds to begin with. Otherwise, EAC will not run on Linux, period. This developer opted-in to EasyAnticheat running, and has continued to opt-in to this.This isn't Valve "tacking on" support, the presence of that file is an explicit "we're permitting this to work" (even if they don't "officially" consider it supported).
If they want money from from Linux users then they need to do better. If they don't then offer out refunds.
I think it's fair to assume shareholders want money from anyone who will give it to them.
Local laws determines if you can get a refund so I can only argue I think you should get a refund if a product stops working due to the manufacture.
Personally I'd rather not buy from them in the first place but there is likely a benefit to showing Linux users will buy it if you treat them right.
A closer analogy might be selling uncooked food that is safe for people with a peanut allergy and then one day adding peanuts as an ingredient after they've paid for a shipment. [It should go without saying avoiding a peanut allergy reaction is more important than preventing a company locking you out of entertainment software you paid for]
It's my hope that corporations will learn it's a dumb choice to needlessly cut off their Linux users but a better choice would be to not play video games where a company can arbitrarily lock you out in the first place. I hope someone is working on a libre version of Apex.