to create video games is quite...surprising.
The article starts off quite normally (in the American way, that is) by listing the somewhat surreal conditions in which the Lumberyard service cannot be used, namely in systems that could endanger human life or safety, in nuclear power plants (to play at blowing up the planet, no doubt), in spacecraft (nothing else!) or in real combat situations (indeed, it's probably better to look at your real opponent rather than at your Battlefield game)...
However (and the point is important), these limitations are no longer relevant in the case, and only in the case, of an epidemic of a virus transmitted by bite or contact with bodily fluids, which would cause the reanimation of human bodies and an insatiable need to consume blood, flesh, brains or human tissues, and which would result in the fall of civilization as we know it
Cheery scenario! Let's hope that Amazon doesn't get the first crack at a piece of health information that the world won't discover until too late... Anyway, who said that lawyers, especially those who write TOS in small print, don't have a sense of humor ;)
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