In today’s live-action adaptation of Ace Attorney, Valve has uncharacteristically broken its silence on the legal war against New York Attorney General Letitia James, over whether gaming content infringes the state’s gambling laws.
Valve maintains that loot boxes are not gambling for teenagers and that the company has been trying to “educate” the Attorney General’s office about virtual items and their difference from gambling.
It must be a mere coincidence that Valve does not see its practices as gambling when it is raking in the money from loot boxes and associated mechanics. While Valve typically keeps quiet on the legal side of things, the content of its reply is not surprising, and neither is calling the lawsuit ‘a disappointing action’.
Valve Tries to Equate Loot Boxes with Labubus

The issue at hand is not intrinsic to loot boxes as a whole (which is its own can of worms), but the fact that Valve makes billions of dollars luring users, including teens and children, into a form of online gambling. Mystery items like crates, cases, and chests contain a variety of cosmetic add-ons and power-ups, often costing real money.
Valve seems to root its defence on the fact that we grew up with similar loot boxes, such as “baseball card packs, blind boxes and bags”, or games like “Pokémon, Magic the Gathering”, and even the now-dead trend of Labubus.
Valve maintains that loot boxes are not gambling for teenagers and that the company has been trying to “educate” the Attorney General’s office
The company followed up by saying that most loot boxes have cosmetic enhancements that do not need to be bought by a player to play a specific game, which is true, but just because you don’t absolutely have to gamble, it doesn’t mean a minor won’t do it anyway. Valve is still advertising gambling to an audience that is protected by law, and if the court sides with the NYAG interpretation, it feels like a clear-cut case.
Valve has tried to attenuate its involvement by claiming that it has been discouraging people from what they deemed as actual gambling: black and grey market transactions where the money does not pass through Valve’s hands. Confirmed involvement in such practices has gotten accounts banned.
Valve seems to stick with its stance that only NYAG wants to ban trading, while Valve’s problem is with trading without its oversight. NYAG surely is pushing a harsher reality and taste of their medicine against Valve.
On a practical level, real money transactions will go on regardless of the ruling, but the NYAG has a shot at regulating the current Wild West that is online cosmetics trading and mystery boxes. While this would still be far from the stricter bans enacted by some European countries like Belgium, a stateside move would likely trigger wider repercussions.

