Quote Originally Posted by SenseiMaria View Post
Also speaking as an actual lawyer here, It doesn't really matter what it states in a ToS - there's tons of precedent in the past of the US court systems that show ToS are very flimsy when it comes to being upheld in court. Plenty of ToS have lost in court, a couple have succeeded, it highly depends on the actual nature of the case itself.

The more important tidbit is the fact that 99.99999% of the population aren't interested to go through a lengthy, stressful & costly legal battle to challenge it over a video game account that you might ultimately end up losing anyway and be in a worse off situation than before, when just quitting or paying $60-ish bucks to restart are infinitely cheaper alternatives.
And? The system can’t force a company to let a player play the game. Especially after breaking the rules. You want to cite a few examples in the US system. The world is bigger than the US. What are the outcomes in Japan as it’s a Japanese company. The law in the US can not dictate the world