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Sony Breaking Refund Policy for Crimson Desert: How to Get Your $70 Back

In a move rarely seen since the Cyberpunk 2077 launch, Sony Interactive Entertainment has begun approving “out-of-policy” refunds for Crimson Desert on the PlayStation 5 and PS5 Pro.

While the PlayStation Store officially maintains a “no refunds once downloaded” stance, hundreds of players are successfully clawing back their $70. If you’ve been struggling with the clunky UI, “Aim-to-Jump” mechanics, or the sub-30 FPS dips in the city, here is the technical breakdown of why this is happening and how you can claim your refund.

The Technical Failure: Why Sony is Budging

Reports from our community and global forums indicate that the “BlackSpace” engine is struggling with severe optimization issues on Sony’s hardware.

  • Base PS5: Frequent crashes and “shimmering” textures due to aggressive upscaling.
  • PS5 Pro: Despite PSSR 2.0, the Zen 2 CPU bottleneck is causing massive frame-time spikes in dense areas like Pywel, leading to a “stuttery” experience even in Performance Mode.
  • Input Latency: The most cited reason for refunds is “unresponsive controls,” specifically the unintuitive mapping that requires an Aim input for traversal.

How to Beat the “Refund Bot”

If you try to refund through the automated PSN chatbot, you will likely be rejected instantly. To get your money back, you must follow the “Human Agent” strategy:

  1. Request a Live Representative: When prompted by the bot, select “Technical Issue” and insist on speaking to a human agent.
  2. Cite “Faulty Performance”: Do not simply say the game is “bad” or “unfun.” Use technical terms: “The game is performing significantly below advertised standards,” or “Frequent frame-rate tanking and input lag make the title unplayable.”
  3. The “Goodwill” Argument: If you have a clean account history, remind the agent of your loyalty. Reports show that even players with 5+ hours of playtime are getting refunds as a “one-time gesture of goodwill.”

Pearl Abyss Responds

Developer Pearl Abyss has scrambled to release “Day 3” patches to address the crashing, but the core optimization issues appear to be baked into the engine’s current build. While some players find the experience “acceptable” after the latest hotfix, the consensus among our community is clear: the hardware isn’t the problem—the software is.

Our Verdict: If you are fighting the controls more than the bosses, file your claim today. Sony handles these on a case-by-case basis, and the “refund window” for technical disasters usually closes fast once a major stability patch is released.

Youtuber Tyrone Magnus explains here in greater detail on why players are refunding the game in mass:

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