French consumer group sues Ubisoft over The Crew shutdown

France's leading consumer association, UFC-Que Choisir, has filed a lawsuit against Ubisoft over the 2024 shutdown of the online racing game The Crew. The action alleges that Ubisoft misled consumers about the permanence of their purchases and imposed abusive clauses stripping players of ownership rights. The Stop Killing Games movement has backed the lawsuit.

UFC-Que Choisir announced the lawsuit on Tuesday, as first reported by Reuters. The case targets the shutdown of The Crew, which occurred two years ago and drew widespread criticism for highlighting issues in game preservation, particularly for always-online titles. Players and advocates responded with modding efforts and prior legal actions against Ubisoft, prompting the publisher to add offline modes to The Crew 2 and Motorfest ahead of their server closures. The lawsuit claims Ubisoft deceived buyers on the lasting nature of their purchase and enforced unfair terms that removed ownership rights from players. Backers, including the Stop Killing Games initiative, argue this fight could influence protections for gamers worldwide. Moritz Katzner, general director of Stop Killing Games, stated that the group expects the EU Parliament to hold a hearing on related matters on April 16. While server maintenance costs challenge publishers for underpopulated games, advocates push for designs ensuring single-player or structured gameplay survives official support.

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Ubisoft rolled out improvements to the offline Hybrid Mode in The Crew 2, enabling livery creation and driver statistics access without an internet connection. The Stop Killing Games movement celebrated the update, claiming its campaign influenced Ubisoft's decisions. These changes build on the mode introduced in October 2025.

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The Stop Killing Games campaign presented its case to the European Parliament, receiving a favorable response from officials. Committee vice chair Nils Ušakovs highlighted concerns over games becoming unplayable after purchase due to discontinued services. Officials pledged further investigation into consumer protections for digital games.

Developers at Rockstar Games have formed the Rockstar Game Workers Union to push for better conditions and justice for dismissed staff. The move comes as legal action over last year's firings continues.

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Three Scottish Labour MPs have accused Grand Theft Auto 6 developer Rockstar of blocking transparency in an ongoing legal dispute over staff dismissals last year. The lawmakers say the company has refused to cooperate with requests for evidence and appeal rights. Rockstar has not responded to requests for comment.

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