It first provides a case for how ingrained online gaming is in many children’s lives, claiming it’s “an extension of their offline life.”
Because online gaming has become more than just a pastime, the Commission believes the same laws regulating offline behavior should extend to online games — including laws regulating compulsive purchases based on risk, chance, and reward (read: “gambling”). Simply disclosing rates, as some developers have opted to do, won’t be enough the Commission says.
The report recommends a variety of actions, from limiting ways money can be spent in games and forbidding paid progression to using online games as digital teaching spaces that help children learn responsibility.
However, these are just recommendations from the Commission. While it’s certainly influential, it doesn’t mean there will be direct action or, as happened in the U.S., a bill proposed to actually enforce regulations Belgium
The full report can be found here.