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Stop Killing Games fails to secure EU law despite 1.3M signatures

Hacker News · Jun 17, 2026, 1:40 AM

Key takeaways

  • In January, the initiative was confirmed to have secured 1,294,188 verified statements of support, passing the one million threshold required for the European Commission to formally examine it.
  • In its official response on June 16, the Commission said it “cannot propose a legal obligation” requiring publishers to keep games playable after they stop being sold commercially.
  • Instead, the Commission said it will begin discussions by the end of 2026 with the video game industry and consumer representatives to draft an industry code of conduct for managing games at the end of their life cycle.

The movement, formally submitted in the EU as the European Citizens’ Initiative “Stop Destroying Videogames,” was built around the idea that publishers should not be able to make games unplayable after ending official support, especially when those games were sold to customers as complete products.

In January, the initiative was confirmed to have secured 1,294,188 verified statements of support, passing the one million threshold required for the European Commission to formally examine it. It was later presented to the Commission in February, followed by a European Parliament hearing in April and a plenary debate in May.

Today, the @EU_Commission replied to the European Citizens Initiative "Stop Destroying Videogames".New legislation will not be proposed, but exchanges will be initiated with consumers & industry to improve the management of videogames' end-of-life.https://t.co/fWYMgoTIQf pic.twitter.com/YPjESHZM19

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