Please show me what part of this law says they must get you in before the general launch of the game:
Goods
Retailers and other such suppliers guarantee their goods will:
Be of acceptable quality (see definition below).
Be fit for a particular purpose that you asked about.
Match the description given in advertisements or sales brochures, or by the sales assistant.
Match the sample or demonstration model.
Be owned by the consumer, once purchased.
Be a reasonable price, if no price or pricing formula has been previously agreed.
Manufacturers (the definition includes importers) in New Zealand guarantee that:
Spare parts and repair facilities will be available for a reasonable time.
They will honour any written warranty that comes with their products.
Goods are of acceptable quality.
Goods match their description.
Services
Service providers guarantee their services will be:
Performed with reasonable care and skill.
Fit for the particular purpose they were supplied for.
Completed within a reasonable time.
A reasonable price, if no price or pricing formula has been previously agreed.
Acceptable quality
This means goods:
Do what they are made to do.
Are acceptable in appearance and finish.
Are free from minor defects.
Are safe and durable.
The Act's terms "reasonable" and "acceptable" are deliberately open-ended. It depends on what a reasonable consumer would think was acceptable based on the nature of the goods, the price, and any statements that have been made about the goods. A concert violin is required to meet a higher standard than a child's cheap instrument. Ultimately a tribunal referee or a judge may have to decide what is reasonable or acceptable in the circumstances.
If a defect was pointed out to you before you bought the good, then it doesn't count towards making it unacceptable.
Please show me a single thing in that list that indicates they have to give you access before the game launch. I dare you . You won't be able to, because it doesn't exist.
No offense, but this thing from New Zealand is practically the same as it is in the United States, btw.