SomeFallout 76players in Australia who requested refunds due to the multitude of issues that plagued the game will be able to receive them.

The Australian Competition & Consumer Commission (ACCC)acceptedan acknowledgment from ZeniMax, the parent company of developer Bethesda, that it likely “misled consumers” over their rights regardingFallout 76.

Some players who purchasedFallout 76complained to the ACCC after ZeniMax representatives told them that they were not entitled to refunds after the game’s launch. The latest entry in theFalloutfranchise suffered from various bugs that hindered gameplay, in addition to lagging servers and visual problems.

With the ACCC’s ruling, ZeniMax will now provide refunds toFallout 76players who requested a refund between July 23, 2025, and July 28, 2025. Players who follow through with obtaining the refund will, of course, lose access to the game.

“When a consumer has purchased a product that has a fault which amounts to a major failure, the Australian Consumer Law provides them with the right to ask for their choice of either a repair, replacement or refund,” the ACCC said in a statement.

In relation to the refunds, ZeniMax will amend its customer service documents and scripts so that the issue will not repeat itself, in case a future game will draw a rash of refund requests likeFallout 76.

Examples of issues that players faced during the early days ofFallout 76includetriple nuke strikescausing a server to crash and accidental in-gameimmortality. There were even problems in the real world, as players who pre-ordered the game’s $200 Power Armor Edition caused an uproar after a promised military-style canvas bag was switched out for a cheapernylon bag.

Refunds aredifferentin the United States, as they follow the seller’s policies. Online purchased made through the online stores for the PlayStation 4 and the Xbox One do not offer refunds for purchases, while Steam and the Epic Games Store allow refunds under certain conditions.

Bethesda has since been trying to win back players toFallout 76, with plans such as apublic test serverthat will roll out in 2020 to help prevent technical glitches. Whatever goodwill the developer has created in improving the game, however, may have been lost again with the $100-per-yearFallout 1stsubscription plan.