Today we have updated a portion of our Refund Policy regarding pre-purchased titles. This change covers titles that are in pre-purchase and offer “Advanced Access”. Playtime acquired during the Advanced Access period will now count towards the Steam refund period. You can find our more information r...
This is not about early access, where you buy an unfinished game that may never be completed. Advanced Access is the fairly uncommon offering where buying some sort of special edition gives you access to the full, complete game a few days before official release.
Advanced Access is time spent with the finished, release-state game. There was no reason for this to have not been counted before.
It's as finished as the game is going to be at launch, this isn't "Early Access" where the game is still evolving. You can talk all you want about how games are released unfinished these days, that's fine, but make no mistake. "Advanced Access" is the game as it will be on release day, with access granted a few days sooner. It is NOT still in active development as an unfinished product and is not going to see significant changes between the start of the Advanced Access period and public release.
Advanced access is playing the game in it's Launch Day state, and any rules for time played should be consistent between Advanced Access and official launch. Your first two hours in Advanced Access will be the same as the first two hours if you only started on launch day. It's the same game with the same refund rules, not your opportunity to red-eye your way through the whole game for a few days and still get an uncontested refund.
Payday 3 worked fine for me before the full release overloaded the always online servers for weeks. It’s a funner game than payday 2 but always online is ridiculous. I don’t want developers to just get away with that in the future.
I wish this wasn't like this. Games should not be allowed to be "early access" for years on end. There should be a realistic linitation, because so many games are EA and then abandoned.
It's not actually about Early Access. It's about Advanced Access -- when you pre-purchase a game and get to play it before the official release as a perk.
Early Access games (=games where the dev knows it isn't done and puts it in Early Access) already had the same refund limits as regular games.
It's early access, if they can alter the game greatly then you should be able to get your money back. They don't like it they should release the game fully.