A Brazilian court has ordered Microsoft to restore hacked Xbox user Ordo_Liberal’s account and digital games, giving the company 15 days to do it.
Ordo_Liberal says Microsoft support confirmed the account had been accessed without authorization and that its security details had been changed. Even so, support said customer service couldn’t recover the profile and could only suspend it permanently.
The ruling says that left Ordo_Liberal locked out of the account and, allegedly, being told to buy the games again, even though two-factor authentication was enabled. The court also awarded about $400 for emotional distress, added daily fines, and said stronger enforcement could follow if Microsoft ignores the order.
Microsoft hadn’t commented at the time of writing.
If you buy games on Xbox, PlayStation, Steam, or Nintendo, this case is one to watch. In most cases, what you own is a revocable license, so a banned, suspended, or hacked account can wipe out a library you paid for.
The timing matters, too. Pressure is building in Brazil around digital-only games, and the Stop Killing Games campaign gained momentum after Ubisoft shut down The Crew.
The dispute hinges on Brazil’s consumer-friendly laws and its small-claims system, which can sometimes be used without hiring your own lawyer. The ruling applies locally, but it’s easy to see why similar protections would matter in Japan, South Korea, Australia, and on Microsoft’s Xbox platform.