The claim alleges that EA.com customers who bought PC games on www.ea.com had their videogame purchase history shared with Facebook without written consent. Electronic Arts (“EA”) may be violating the privacy rights of its users by tracking them and disclosing their personally identifiable information and information about the PC Games they purchased to third parties without their written consent. To qualify for this claim, you need to have an EA App account and have purchased at least one PC game from www.ea.com within the last two years. Some of the games sold on ea.com that would qualify for this claim include Apex Legends, Battlefield 2042, Madden NFL, FIFA, NHL, Need for Speed Underground, Dead Space, Wild Hearts, The Sims, EA Sports PGA Tour, Star Wars Jedi: Survivor, Super Mega Baseball, F1, Immortals of Aveum, EA Sports FC, EA Sports WRC, and Tales of Kenzara: Zau among others. If you bought games within the past two years, you may qualify for a claim under video privacy laws to seek up to $2,500 per incident.
This is a case about data privacy. We allege that EA is violating the privacy rights of its users that purchased PC games on its website, www.ea.com/. EA discloses its customers’ personally identifiable information, including the PC games they purchased, to third parties without obtaining separate consent from them. We allege that this combination of information can be used to identify individual subscribers and their entire PC game purchase history. We are representing clients in individual arbitration claims against EA for violating the Video Privacy Protection Act, which awards damages of up to $2,500 per violation, as well as additional state consumer protection and privacy laws depending on what state customers live in.