(to which McDonald's counter-offered $800...for third degree burns over 6% over a 79-year old grandmother's body).
I still laugh at us as a country for this happening an someone getting paid for incompetence. Not your or anything, just using the quote from your post rather than reading the article again, and leaving links in place so others can read your entire post in its entirety.
Yeah they were told many times the coffee was too hot for people to drink right away. Oddly the word "hot" escapes people and if not labeled, status quo doesn't say coffee is served frozen. I would assume she drank some in the past or saw other people drink coffee before and noticed the steam.
Did she forget than, as a grandmother, what she should have taught her children about what "hot" means? They reach for a pot on a stove and she tells them "hot" but they can't see if and touch it anyway, they learn what hot means and probably, like she did, learned she signs of something hot was...like the steam she should have seem form other people's coffee to know it wasn't server at room temperature but above.
The whole thing is as dumb as the person attempting larceny who sued a home owner because after falling through the home owners front porch when trying to rob them, he badly injured his leg....AND HE WON THE CASE!
Shows common sense does not exist in courtrooms to even allow some of this stuff.
Always check food prepared by someone else before eating, that is what I was taught because not everybody does things the same way. OMG if she actually got a fresh burger from McD's for a change she could have had a heart attack because it wasn't sitting under a heating oven getting stale for 3 hours.
I can't help but laugh at that story/case.
Likewise suing WotC/HASBRO even for mental anguish wouldn't be posible if you had a case, unles you had enough money to fight HASBRO, so it would be moot even IF anyone thought a case could be made.
The only results it would have is similar to the MCDs coffee incident where people would lose more faith in humanity, but specifically to gamers or the game if the case was in the public view.
WotC makes a product, jsut like everyone else that is using planned obsolescence. They make products to break down after a set time or need to be replaced within the laws of their industry. I don't think games like D&D have laws for it like home appliances, so they can really plan for it to break down at any time. Therefore your purchasing and using the product is at the consumers risk. You bought a book, you got a book. If the book was damaged you might be able to get it replaced. Like a cup of coffee from MCds, check to make sure your purchase is what you want before you leave the place of purchase. Too hot, too cold, pages missing, etc the consumer needs to be responsible for some of their own doings rather than play pass the blame for their own consumer negligence.
I dont even think 4th edition advertisement and marketing, with its treatment of the views of older editions players, would be strong enough for lawsuits relating to liable/slander, or even defamation of character.
The more companies get sued the higher prices go, so unless you REALLY have something that is solely the companies fault, get off the sue-wagon because even if you win your case, that extra money for a silly lawsuit wont go far as more people continue to sue and cause companies to raise prices for everyone to recover the cost of the lawsuit and any payments having to be made in regards tot he cases themselves.
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too long didn't read version: To OP: No.