As reported by Polygon, an Arizona father has brought a potential class action lawsuit against Blizzard over the sale of Hearthstone card packs to minors.
Lawyers of the father, Nathan Harris, filed a complaint in the Superior Court of Orange County on behalf of his daughter and other minors who have bought Hearthstone's randomized card packs. Harris' suit alleges that his daughter used his credit and debit cards to spend over $300 on card packs between 2019 and 2021. The suit argues that Blizzard's lack of refund policy and parental controls is in breach of «disaffirmation law,» or the right to renounce a contract, as it applies to minors through the California Family Code.
Blizzard filed its own complaint on May 17 outlining some counterarguments, as well as requesting that the case be moved from the Superior Court of Orange County to the higher-level Central District of California. Blizzard argues that the company «does not know, and would have no way of accurately knowing, which Hearthstone in-game transactions were initiated by minors using parental credit or debit cards, as Plaintiff claims to have done.» The complaint continues, «Blizzard does not concede, and in fact disputes, that such transactions fall within the scope of any state's disaffirmation law.»
The company also argues that the «unknowable portion» of Hearthstone's $1 billion revenue made up of sales to minors would only have to make up «one half of one percent» of that revenue to exceed the $5 million threshold to move the case from the Orange County court to the Central District of California.
Legal action on loot boxes has largely been a nonstarter in the United States, with Blizzard successfully moving a 2020 lawsuit covering Overwatch loot boxes
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