Smurf Game Adds Warning to Stop Parents Seeing Red

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Fishing for dollars? A screen shot of Smurf Village.

Smurfs’ Village, the iPhone/iPad game a lot of parents point the finger at for accidental in-app purchases, has now added a few warnings.

The first sentence of the game description now reads:

“Smurf Village is free to play, but charges real money for additional in-app content. You may lock out the ability to purchase in-app content by adjusting your device’s settings.”

When players launch the game the first time, a pop-up also warns that add-ons in building the virtual village come with real-world price tags.

Those caveats probably won’t stop the ire of parents, though, whose young kids will find it even easier now to make super-sized buys with the game.

Before, a the highest two-tap Smurfberries purchase option was a “wheelbarrow” for $59.99, now it’s a “wagon” for $99.99.

Smurfs’ Village is currently third-highest grossing game for the iPad. Other top-grossing “free” games for the iPhone and iPad, including “Tap Zoo” and “Bakery Story,” also have $99.99 in-game purchase options but do not have up-front warnings.

The best option: disable in-app purchases. To wit, the second part of Capcom’s warning says:

“You may lock out the ability to purchase in-app content by adjusting your device’s settings.

iOS will keep you logged on for 15 minutes after you download the app. Additional purchases won’t require a re-entry of the password during this 15- minute interval. This is a function of the iOS software and not within our control.”

Source: AP

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