When Valve established Steam in Australia, it did not seek out legal advice or ensure it followed local regulations until the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission was alerted in 2014, Valve's general counsel Karl Quackenbush said. This lack of forethought did not sit well with Justice Edelman.

"[Valve] had a culture by which it formed a view without Australian legal advice that it was not subject to Australian law, and it was content to proceed to trade with Australian consumers without that advice and with the view that even if advice had been obtained that Valve was required to comply with Australian law the advice might have been ignored," his judgement reads, according to the Morning Herald.

Valve is a United States company serving 2.2 million accounts in Australia, and between 2011 and 2014 it received 21,124 tickets with the word "refund" from Australian IP addresses, Justice Edelman said.

Australia's federal court found in March that Valve's lack of a refund policy on Steam violated consumer law. Valve implemented an international refund policy in mid-2015.

Valve initially suggested it should pay a AUD$250,000 penalty, but Justice Edelman said that figure was "not even a real cost of doing business. It would barely be noticed."

Luckily, refunds are now definitely a thing on Steam -- and the site's winter sale is going on right now.