Now Ouya need to be very careful with this. I understand why they have done it BUT it does say on the box "Every game is free to try". I know this will vanish from future boxes but from a legal standpoint, that was advertised as a selling point to current Ouya owners. It could be down to how local law views it but you could find that some current Ouya owners could be entitled to their money back from this as what you write on the box can be seen almost as a contract between buyer and seller. I know it's unlikely that many people will act on it but that's not the point I'm trying to make here. Change the terms of service on them in a way that differs from what was originally advertised to them at the time of purchase and quite often that gives them ground to disagree with the new terms and get refunded. I'm no expert so don't take this as set in stone but consumers have a lot of rights and also have the right to disagree with the new service terms.

I know Ouya probably have a small legal team looking into this sort of thing but beware changes to policies that were originally printed on the box.

Apart from that, although this will not make much difference to my own personal usage of the OUYA and I can see their reasoning behind doing this, I can't help but feel the consumer has got the short straw here. If a company makes a promise on the box when you purchase the product and then revokes that promise, surely people would naturally feel a bit hard done by.

I'm all for developers having freedom but I'm with the consumers on this one.