Microsoft Deleted His Xbox Account Over a "Hack" — He Sued and Won
A Reddit user's two-part saga is making the rounds this week, and it's the kind of story that should worry anyone with a digital game library.
The account got locked, then deleted
The user, posting as u/Ordo_Liberal, first shared his ordeal in r/pcgaming. His Microsoft account had been locked, and when he reached out to support, he says he was told the account had indeed been compromised. Rather than restoring access, Microsoft support informed him the account was being permanently suspended — and that any games tied to it, including Minecraft, would need to be repurchased on a new account. Files stored in OneDrive were reportedly gone for good too, according to the support email he posted.
That kind of response tends to raise flags for anyone who's followed digital ownership fights before — you can have two-factor authentication turned on and still end up locked out with no path back in, according to security details from the case.
The follow-up: he took Microsoft to court
The second post, in r/xbox, is the part worth paying attention to. Ordo_Liberal says he filed suit in Brazil, where consumer protection law is notably aggressive, and won. A translated excerpt of the ruling he posted orders Microsoft to unlock the account within 15 days (or face a daily fine), and to pay 2,000 Brazilian reais — roughly $400 USD — in damages for moral harm, with additional penalties if Microsoft drags its feet on payment.
Outlets that picked up the story, including Insider Gaming, noted that Brazil's consumer protection framework meant Ordo_Liberal incurred no legal costs and didn't have to pay his attorney. ComicBook.com framed it as part of a broader pattern of concern around digital-only game libraries, tying it to Sony's own recent moves away from physical media.
Why this matters beyond one Reddit thread
This isn't really an "Xbox" problem — it's a digital ownership problem. When your library lives entirely inside a platform account, a fraud-detection false positive (or an actual hack that support can't or won't untangle) can wipe out years of purchases with no built-in recourse. Ordo_Liberal only got his account and games back because Brazilian law gave him a cheap, fast legal path that most players in the US and elsewhere simply don't have access to.
Worth remembering next time someone tells you physical media is dead weight: a disc on a shelf doesn't have a support ticket queue.
Sources: r/pcgaming — original post, r/xbox — lawsuit update,