How the hell is that a 'draconian' law? That would be a great law. If you try to do a charge back on Sim City, EA will ban your ENTIRE origin account, meaning you lose ALL your games.
Well yes. Not all sales are refundable. Do you ever get to refund a game from Steam? Wait, no you can't, cause they are not refundable. How about EB games? Oh wait, no, non-refundable.
So you try to dispute a credit charge for a non refundable game, which you knew when you bought it, would piss off any merchant wouldn't it? If you're not honoring your part of the bargain by not paying for a nonrefundable item, they have every right to tell you to go f yourself because I wouldn't want your business either. I find it hard to believe they will remove you from playing every game that you bought, but if that is the case, I would gladly agree with you that is bullshit. Though it sounds to me that they will forbid you to use to that credit card for any future purchase, which makes sense.
If you want to make a law that changes the fact that software should be refundable if it doesn't work as intended on day one, then be my guest. I don't think it would be a good idea though. Software prices will rise, and then go out of business. Then you end up with more monopolies on luxury items that will pick and chose what software they want to risk taking to market.
By you rules, technology always runs flawless, and every game developer should go out of business because consumers can refund it day 1, after copying the game and cracking it for their own usage. Hell, Adobe is crazy enough to offer 30 day free trials of Photoshop, and I can only imagine the piracy rate on it. But they don't care because their target is small to mid-size businesses that can't take the risk of illegal software. I know it sounds like a raw deal to the consumer, but again, a consumer should know better by now. Do publishers take advantage that the law favors them with nonrefundable sales and implausibility of warranty? You bet. Which is why I hate EA even more.