It's impressive how this initiative has gathered 360k votes in no time yet completely stagnated ever since. I don't think it means that the initiative is done, actually I am quite optimistic it can pass, but these things go in waves. I think every time there is a new coverage on the initiative it launches it higher, we just need some folks who have some local presence in the EU to get their audience to act. Perhaps some famous video game streamers? Has that been done already?
It needs a movement to get more signature. If you believe in it and are in Europe, go encourage your friends to vote. Gather some friends and make signs. Buy ads.
Because it isn't really even an initiative. It is a random non-law pushed by a youtuber that people have latched onto because it is a way to say "lazy devs are ruining gaming".
If you are talking to chat about why you are their best friend? Yeah. It is awesome. And "Let our representatives figure out what the law should actually be. We just don't want Them to take our gherms!"
If you are someone who actually is looking at the feasability of this for the industry? You start to see a LOT of major issues. Which actually do matter in countries that care a lot more about workers' rights (so a lot of Europe, where this actually matters).
And if you are a normy who doesn't watch the Right streams? You say "Wait... we want to trust the government with nebulous demands to legislate our passion? Are you fucking stupid? Do Jack Thompson and Tipper Gore mean nothing to you?!?!?"
I am very much for consumer protections. But we need actual legislature and thought outside of kneejerk slogans and vaguery. Because fuck the publishers. But the devs? They are humans too. Humans being told they have to work 7 day weeks up until the next advertising campaign for a game that is like ten years delayed at this point.
It is literally an initiative. Jack Thompson was disbarred, and any kind of assertion between video games and real world violence is long since dismissed. Meanwhile games are willfully designed to leave you with a worse product and little to no indication what you're actually getting for your money, and that isn't some theory. Leaving a game in a reasonably functional state without intervention from the game's publisher is pretty specific, and it just happens to cover some use cases that affect a game company's bottom line, but that should be the cost of doing business. Developers and publishers can be just as guilty on this when they've got the same incentives.
From what I gather, you want specifics in an initiative. You are getting ahead of yourself. What this initiative signals is the need for change and legislation in video games. If passed, the next step is sitting down with representatives of both consumers and video game producers where specifics are drawn.
You don't start an initiative with specifics. If you start an initiative that way, you are presenting a one-sided list of demands where the only representation is the consumer. Unless people start dying over shutdown video games tomorrow, this is the only good shot at actually getting some consumer protections in this industry.
If you want change, you will sign this petition. If you don't, you won't. It's as simple as that.