By Laura Pennington  |  January 7, 2019

Category: Consumer News

Parents Say Legendary Game of Heroes Gems Constitute GamblingIn recent years, games allowing players to purchase tool chests or hidden surprises have become more popular. One common example includes the Legendary Game of Heroes gems, which players can use real money to purchase.

However, complaints have also increased as this practice of pay-to-play has become widespread across the gaming industry. Some parents allege that many of these tool chests or surprise boxes don’t have value that lines up with the real amount of currency paid to obtain them.

Consumer advocates are concerned that in-game purchases of the Legendary Game of Heroes gems could be problematic with regards to consumer protections. Manufacturers offer digital products within these games that are referred to as micro-transactions.

While the concept of making purchases inside video games is not new, many of the transactions of years past have been for specific upgrades, like known game boosts or particular pieces of armor or outfits for the character in the game. The newer treasure boxes, however, are surprises, which leads some consumers to claim that this type of purchase doesn’t give players the value they pay for.

One common example is the Legendary Game of Heroes gems, which can be purchased inside the game while it is being played online. These virtual items can be redeemed for other virtual items inside the game but are purchased using real money.

Some parents are concerned about the ability for children to purchase these Legendary Game of Heroes gems as well as whether or not this violates laws when parents purchase it.

One class action lawsuit already alleges that these prize items, crates and gems inside games are deceptively marketed because the value of the items inside the games does not line up with what has to be paid to obtain them.

Items inside these games can be purchased during a gaming session by purchasing keys that later activate these rewards or by purchasing them directly. In both of these cases, the purchase of items such as the Legendary Game of Heroes gems requires real currency such as payment through PayPal or a credit card.

Many players refer to these micro-transaction game elements as loot boxes. Some parents are concerned that these loot boxes may be a form of illegal gambling. Early on, these loot boxes were used to distribute rewards randomly throughout the video game but have been monetized in recent years, an action which some people believe constitutes gambling due to the micro-transactions requiring actual payment.

The popularity of these pay-to-play loot boxes began to emerge in 2009 with free social media games. Government regulators have begun to question whether or not these paid for loot boxes are even legal. Some of the micro-transaction purchasers even say that they have attempted to reach out to customer service about getting a refund, but they say they have received no response.

Join a Free Video Game In-Game Purchases Class Action Lawsuit Investigation

Did you or your child make in-game purchases while playing one or more of the following video games?

  • Fortnite
  • DOTA 2
  • Counterstrike
  • Legendary Game of Heroes
  • FIFA 18
  • FIFA 19

If you or your child made in-game purchases in the course of playing any of the video games listed above, you may qualify to join this video game class action lawsuit investigation. Filing or joining a class action lawsuit could help you in getting compensation for the money spent on items that allegedly failed to provide the value promised by these gaming companies.

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4 thoughts onAre Legendary Game of Heroes Gems Worth What Gamers Are Paying?

  1. Daniel Smith says:

    Im sitting in the same boat as a few others regarding the forever decks.

  2. Ricky says:

    Hi could you please let me knw how i would also go about gettin my money bk from the fraud lgoh has commited with thr forever decks which are knw useless

  3. Jason Greasley says:

    How do I join a class action against legendary regarding the fraudulent statement about forever decks. I’ve seen several comments, is there an active class action regarding the 4.0 upgrade which makes previous purchases since 9th feb 2019 when the statement was made virtually obselete

  4. Sigert Vanneste says:

    I’ve played legebdary game of heroes. I’m asking to refund my money because of false advertising. They either deny my request or ignore my mail

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