![](https://cdn.benzinga.com/files/imagecache/2048x1536xUP/images/story/2022/06/02/fifa18_36016647834.jpg)
- Consumer advocates demanded U.S. regulators probe videogame maker Electronic Arts Inc (NASDAQ:EA) for the misleading use of a digital "loot box" that "aggressively" provoked players to splurge while playing a popular soccer game, Reuters reports.
- Fairplay, Center for Digital Democracy, and 13 other organizations urged the Federal Trade Commission to probe the EA game "FIFA: Ultimate Team."
- The game, which usually costs $50 to $100, allegedly lured the players to splurge, searching for exceptional players.
- The groups claimed that the chances of opening a coveted card, like a Player of the Year, were unlikely unless a gamer spent thousands of dollars on points or played for thousands of hours to earn coins, the groups claimed.
- The groups also linked the loot boxes to gambling.
- Price Action: EA shares traded lower by 0.42% at $138.98 on the last check Thursday.
- Photo via Wikimedia Commons