
Flagship Studios recently released a demo for their upcoming game, Hellgate: London. Fans who decided to read the EULA, were shocked to find that it allowed EA to collect personal data for advertising. News hit the Internet and has prompted Flagship to give a response.

Before Flagship Studios, there was Blizzard North. Originally known as Condor, the Redwood-based studio was acquired in 1997 by Blizzard Entertainment. At the time, Blizzard North was hard at work on the development of the game that would be the cornerstone of everything that came after: Diablo.

IGN : Remember Hellgate: London? The dark fantasy action role-playing game came out in 2007 for PC, a year before developer Flagship Studios went bankrupt. Since then, various free-to-play and online revivals have come and gone. Now, 17 years after the release of Hellgate: London, it’s back.
I remember some friends and I all bought Hellgate: London day one because it was made by some original Diablo devs. We had fun playing it, good memories.

PC Invasion: Hellgate: London is back on Steam, but it's not what you expect it to be. It's a single-player game in the vein of Asian MMOs.
You telling me people are just barely reading these eula's.
LOL, to be honest, I dont read them at all, I just click OK.....
I mean, Im old school, been playing games for a Long time, Its just a game. Right??? lol
The thing I hate about EULA is that if you decide you don't like it and you disagree, you can't return the game since almost nobody allows returns on opened games.
If you don't like it, you really don't have recourse.
NOTHING will stop me form getting my annual fix of Diablo like games
At least i am not as desperate as I as before I found Titan Quest...oh boy that game was a live saver :P
And afer playing Hellgate Demo it look like it might live up to Diablo 2
this games getting an instant 0 from me.