Far from me the intention of defending a company with the habit of exploiting its employees, but... the possibility of an investment failing is what is called entrepreneurial risk. There's no such thing as free money.
You can find a complete copy of Andrew Trampe's court-submitted complaint here [courthousenews.com].
In it, one of the things that you will find is the following statement:-
"6. Plaintiff, as set forth in the accompanying Certification, purchased the Company’s securities at artificially inflated prices during the Class Period and was damaged upon the revelation of the alleged corrective disclosure."
What this means is that Andrew Trampe claims that he purchased shares in the parent company in the period of time betw
Combination of increased victim/outrage culture and Sony getting upset by having to do refunds (which isn't to say getting a refund isn't justified, just that the song and dance around it keeps getting grander).
There's only a few showstopper bugs, such as compulsive hoarders crashing their save, it's a lot like Assassin's Creed Unity... but Ubisoft didn't tell people to get refunds.
I mean the game has plenty of potential if the bugs were under control.
In it, one of the things that you will find is the following statement:-
"6. Plaintiff, as set forth in the accompanying Certification, purchased the Company’s securities at artificially inflated prices during the Class Period and was damaged upon the revelation of the alleged corrective disclosure."
What this means is that Andrew Trampe claims that he purchased shares in the parent company in the period of time betw
Combination of increased victim/outrage culture and Sony getting upset by having to do refunds (which isn't to say getting a refund isn't justified, just that the song and dance around it keeps getting grander).
There's only a few showstopper bugs, such as compulsive hoarders crashing their save, it's a lot like Assassin's Creed Unity ... but Ubisoft didn't tell people to get refunds.