
Originally Posted by
Catapult
Indeed, our posts were moved to General Discussion, it seems.
Some of us call it Invasion Day, since it marks the landing of the first British fleet rather than anything specifically patriotic, such as the date we got our independence, but I digress...
In Australia, lottery and competition law varies by state. However one thing is consistent: if a competition involves a selection by skill, and chance plays no part in the outcome (which is the case in all of SE's competitions to date), no state or territory requires you to get a permit. All that is left is to make sure that you're complying with with ACCC's guidelines on fair trade. For competitions, this involves not misleading the consumer - ie: if you say you're going to issue a prize, you actually issue it.
So then we get to competition terms and conditions, on which my knowledge is... admittedly not complete, but I'll take a stab.
If you're running a competition in Australia, you need to have a business in Australia. Most competitions include in their T&C the entity running the competition, complete with address.
While the company "Square Enix Limited" exists on the Australian Business Register (ABN: 93 464 047 509) they do not have a main business location listed, suggesting that the ABN exists solely for the purpose of business interaction with Australia from a remote location. Personally, I can't see why this would be an issue - just list the UK, JP or US office as the address of the Australian company - but there may be rules on either side of the trade boundary I'm not familiar with here.
Then we get down to the real problem. Is it worth spending the time to nut all this out including paying for legal advice to appease the minority that is Australians? If they're only going to get half a dozen entries... well, you can see where I'm going, as much as it pains me to say it. For many international video game companies, we are more of a pain to be appeased for reputation purposes than a market worth exploiting.
/sigh
One thing to SE's credit - they are letting us enter competitions when there are only digital (no physical) prizes. That is the sort of competition I'd like to see more of.