More about theft of games is just the case when wild legislation is compensated for its non-compliance.
I’ve been buying games for a long time. 90% of them I didn’t play for 10 minutes, and I went to the end even less. And why - because the description, video and images on the disk, as a rule, do not have anything to do with the game itself, but are simply advertising texts and multimedia downloads. There is something ugly inside. And a few years ago, they even improved the marketing policy - in general, they stopped writing even the genre of the game and giving quite vague descriptions, such as, well, you buy, and there you will look.
If you make an analogy with the purchase, for example, a mobile phone, then it will be somewhere like this - you have to buy a mobile phone in a box with a beautiful picture. To open it and see what functions there, so it works, there can be no talk. You come home and prove to the company that you actually paid for it and then you can open the box and start looking at the phone.
That is, 100% seller protection and 0% buyer protection.
The internet is even more funny. Again, by analogy with real. Suppose in some cafe someone was killed, then according to the legislation of the cafe you need to close and try to jail the director of the cafe.