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People can use their existing nicknames used in the predecessor for Sudden Attack 2, while the list of friends and clan names are also maintained. 1 share in PC rooms for consecutive 106 weeks and simultaneous access of more than 350,000 people. The game was developed by Nexon GT, a subsidiary of Nexon, and is a successor to Sudden Attack that once boasted of No. Korea's game developer Nexon launched Wendesday its official edition of Sudden Attack 2, a first person shooting game played in PCs, in hopes to regain customers in the Internet game market is increasingly being dominated by foreign rivals. Hopefully, this lesson will teach these three companies to be more transparent with their item percentages.Nexon launches Sudden Attack 2 aiming to regain popularity. “The FTC’s actions have signalled alarm across the Korean game sector as it could hurt the sales of in-game items — particularly randomized items, which users tend to continuously buy until they get the desired result — that contribute immensely to profits.”Âīoth Netmarble and NextFloor were guilty of embezzling their customers by providing misleading information about the frequency of unique item drops in their loot boxes. The Korean FTC presented a case where one player spent US$430 trying to get the pieces, to show that the ads do help in instilling that gambling effect onto players. To quote the Korean Herald piece:
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The truth is that some of the pieces would only be present in 0.5% of the loot boxes. The ads were framed so that consumers believed that the odds of obtaining each piece were the same. If all 16 were collected, they grant an in-game bonus for the user. Two of the 16 puzzle pieces offered cost US$0.85 apiece. In the event itself, participants were encouraged to buy loot boxes for a chance to get puzzle pieces. Nexon’s large sum was due to its handling of Sudden Attack in the region according to a Korean Herald report (via Dotesports), the Korean Fair Trade Commission (FTC) argued that the way it was advertising its loot boxes during an in-game event called Celebrity Count was deceptive. Nexon was fined for a hefty US$875,000 while Netmarble was hit with US$55,000. Nexon handles Counter-Strike wannabe Sudden Attack, FIFA Online 3, and the SEA-favourite Maple Story. Netmarble is more well-known for its mobile gaming fares like the super-popular Seven Knight, Marvel Future Fight, and Star Wars: Force Arena. Most gamers are familiar with the first two companies. Nexon, Netmarble, and NextFloor were fined recently over deceptive loot box practices. Today’s not a good day if you’re a South Korean video game company who likes profiting off of loot boxes.
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