a day ago
- Entertainment
- Time of India
Pirate Software claims being made 'the villain' boosted petition's momentum as Stop Killing Games hits 1 million signatures
(Image via YouTube/Pirate Software)
The Stop Killing Games petition has now surged past a million signatures, but there's an unexpected twist. It's not just about the milestone. Jason 'Thor' Hall, popularly known as Pirate Software, the vocal critic of this moment, claims that social media backlash against him painted him as an antagonist, but truly, that turbocharged the momentum of the SKG movement.
Such a counter-intuitive argument added a dramatic layer to the fight to preserve access to the purchased games.
Pirate Software claims the villain narrative ignited support in the Stop Killing Games favour
Pirate Software has directly countered the claims that his critical analysis video damaged the SKG petition. He presented some data and suggested that interest was already waning before he commented on the issue. He further made a striking assertion, saying the campaign gained crucial traction as supporters rallied against him.
Hall bluntly stated about social media,
"My videos do not seem to have had any impact on the movement at all.' 'Making me the villain did, though,"
he further added, suggesting that the controversy which surrounded his stance and all subsequent online firestorm that labelled him an opposition, quite seemingly unified SKG supporters. The common enemy effect, in a manner, injected fresh energy and helped propel the petition to reach its landmark of a million signatures.
How did fans react to Pirate Software not being a villain narrative?
The online response to Hall's claim was a whirlwind. The fans, as usual, remain divided. While some accused him of muddying up the waters, the supporters did defend him and his perspective, with a user noting that Louis disapproved of the pile-on that's against him.
The others even acknowledged Pirate Software's value to developers and urged collaborations. The comment read,
'You brought up some good points, and you should work with the movement instead of against it IMO.
Developers like you should have a voice in this.'
It further added,
"We need pple like you pirate,'
showing support to Hall.
A user even said that they saw many creator videos, and he was surprised how people were not able to relate to what Hall was trying to say through his video. As per the user, he was
'speaking about it as a dev from a dev PoV and simply almost no gamer could relate…'
While some followers felt that Pirate Software's impact on the movement was undeniable, despite his denial, others just ignored everything with a one-word,
'Sure…'
Not all stood with Pirate Software, though, and skepticism did kick in. There were direct attacks made on Pirate Software. A user on his post commented,
'Just stop man , just stop killing games.'
Many X users even saw a broader human tendency here at play. As per their observation,
'People love drama and they love having a villain to hate.'
While the other added,
'People just look for a scapegoat when their stupid things start failing.'
The idea that Pirate Software became an unintentional catalyst resonated with many. Some even theorized that he was just a convenient target who got in the middle of the drama, due to his firm stand. As per them, people needed a bogey man and they latched on to him.
Stop Killing Games is not an easy fight.
Beyond all drama, there is the core aspect that was in the middle of the discussion. It's about the petition's core challenge-
European Union
copyright law.
While many legal experts and Pirate Software pointed out that the goal of SKG is to force publishers to release tools that allow games to work offline indefinitely, their stance clashes fundamentally with the EU directives, which protect Digital Rights Management (DRM).
The Information Society Direction of the EU mandates a strong legal shield against circumventing DRM, the action needed to preserve many games after they are shut down.
Also, the existing EU consumer laws are focused on upfront information and product conformity at the purchase, and not perpetual service obligations.
To grant SKG's demand would need a radical and legally complex overhaul of all established intellectual property and contract law hierarchies in the EU, which is far beyond what the petition could achieve alone. The reality presents many hurdles, irrespective of the signature count. It shows and proves that the fight is just far from over.
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