It
appears I have lost my battle against Electronic Arts'
Rock Band
support team in attempting to negotiate for the replacement of my
defective
Rock Band
wired
guitar for Xbox 360 with a wireless one. If you happened to read my
review
on the game, you already know that I have already had a total of
three
Rock Band
guitars, each of which came defective. What I did not tell you,
mainly because I didn't feel right publicizing it at the time, was
that the support representative I was dealing with at the time had
gotten permission to send me a wireless guitar as my third
replacement/fourth guitar. The fact of the matter is that this kind
of a replacement is by no means normal, and I had managed to
negotiate it because of the poor level of support I had been
receiving before dealing with this representative. What neither he,
nor I knew at the time, was that this kind of replacement is actually
completely impossible to do.

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Some
background before I go on. I first contacted
Rock Band
support in December regarding my
first defective guitar. As I noted in the game review, Overdrive
didn't work properly, if at all. Being the kind of person to run
through everything properly first before contacting the manufacturer,
I had gone through the online support system, only to find there were
no answers to my problem. And so, I left a question with
Rock
Band
support asking what to do.
The first response I received was a form letter copy-pasted from the
online support system. I found this rather annoying and proceeded to
write a response of my own, telling the representative who sent me
the message that I did not enjoy receiving copy-pasted answers that
did not address my questions.
By
January 2
nd
,
a timely response, I had received an answer telling me to contact
Rock Band
support by
phone. I did so and had my first replacement guitar within a couple
of weeks. EA was kind enough to let all of the people from that time
frame keep their original guitar instead of sending it in. For those
people, like me, whose guitars were only partially defective, this
wasn't too bad of a deal. Unfortunately, this second guitar had a
sticky blue fret button – not very useful when it doesn't spring
back after being pressed. After waiting about a week to see if the
problem might just fix itself – it didn't – I once again called
Rock Band
support to
ask for a replacement guitar. The fact that my drum pedal cracked
around that time might have also helped me get around to making the
call.

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While
on the phone, I put in the order for my second replacement guitar and
a new drum pedal. Since I saw the condition my first two guitars came
in, and having heard about all of the cracked drum pedal stories, I
decided to make sure that the warranty would cover my replaced
accessories until EA confirmed that there were no longer defects
across the entire line. After a strange conversation with a support
representative, who at one point told me his supervisor told him that
warranty on replaced accessories is indefinite, but told me there was
no supervisor there to speak to when asked, I was told to send an
email to a specific email address to request a confirmation of what
he had told me in writing.
I
wrote a thorough email explaining the whole situation, which I saved
to my hard drive, and sent it off to the address, only to find out
that this address did not accept emails. It only sent them. Now
slightly more agitated, knowing that this particular representative
was just trying to get me off the phone, I sent in a new question to
Rock Band
support with
the complete email attached. The response I got back was another
answer that did not address the concerns I had raised. Once again, I
wrote back asking for a real response and, after being passed around
between two more support representatives, finally got a confirmation
notifying me that the warranty for replaced
Rock Band
accessories is, indeed, indefinite.
By
the time I had received the response, now late February, my new
guitar had arrived – also defective. I immediately contacted the
support representative who confirmed the warranty to inform him that
I would, again, need another replacement. By now, I had already found
out that EA would be introducing a wireless guitar, so I said I would
wait until they were available to ask for my third replacement. It
was quite some time until they were to release, but I didn't care. I
didn't want yet another defective wired guitar, when I could hope
that I'd get a replacement guitar and have the extra benefit of it
being wireless. I had gone through so much trouble already anyway.
As
it turned out, there was far more trouble waiting for me, as I would
have the wonderful experience of trying to locate a ghost drum pedal,
learn that there is no tracking on Electronic Arts' warranty
shipments once they cross the border into Canada, and that, according
to the support team's records, someone had indeed received and signed
for my new drum pedal. As it turned out, the representative who was
supposed to order my replacement drum pedal never did so, and neither
did the next representative who was supposed to order the replacement
for the missing one. I finally received my replacement drum pedal in
mid-March.
The
Rock Band
wireless
guitars for Xbox 360 finally started hitting Canadian retailer's
shelves in late April. In mid-May, I called to check in and see if I
could finally get my new replacement guitar. Apparently not, so I
finally took the time to make a phone call to
Rock Band
support today, to try and get in touch with the representative and
see if there were any updates on the status of the replacement. Last
I had heard from him, back in May, the replacement wireless guitars
were on back order for Canada. I didn't manage to get to speak to him
today, but what I ended up finding out was that what he said was not
quite true, not that I'm blaming him. While there were no replacement
wireless guitars for him to send out to Canada, it was not because
they were on back order. As the representative and supervisor I spoke
to today told me, there were none because EA does not ship
replacement wireless guitars to Canada.

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As
it turns out, Electronic Arts' warranty system doesn't allow the
shipping of wireless guitars to Canada at all, even for the
replacement of defective ones purchased in Canadian stores. Even if I
had purchased one in a store here, and not negotiated for a wired one
to be replaced with a wireless one, I still wouldn't be able to get a
replacement for it because I live in Canada!
With
all of that in mind, consider this. Let's say you live in Canada,
like myself, and you've purchased a
Rock Band
wireless guitar so you can have the full band available. Now let's
say that the return policy date for the store from which you
purchased the guitar had passed (as an example, Future Shop has a 30
day return policy), and you began having problems with your wireless
guitar, only to find out that it is defective. Officially speaking,
continuing with Future Shop as the example store, you've still got 29
days to contact EA to inform the
Rock Band
support
team that you have a defective wireless guitar and ask for a
replacement.
Of
course, as you've likely figured out on your own already, EA won't
send you a replacement for that defective guitar, because you live in
Canada. So what can you do? You could try taking the guitar back to
the store you purchased it from. They could be nice to you and
replace it for you, but officially speaking, they have no obligation
to do so, and you know that. You''ll have to try calling
Rock
Band
support and see what they
say, aside from, “We don't send replacement
Rock Band
wireless guitars to Canada.”
What will likely end up happening is that you will have to submit
your complete receipt information, including the location and phone
number for the store, and hope that the
Rock Band
support
team gets the store to replace the guitar. If they don't, who knows
where that will leave you.
Speaking
of which, if anybody has actually had to go through this already,
we'd love to hear from you. Email us, leave a comment or make a
YouTube
or Revver
video and send it to either of our channels to let us know. We'd like
to know what you had to do and how long the whole process took.
If
you live in Canada and are looking to get a
Rock Band
wireless guitar, pray that it
both works right out of the box and stays working or, if you find out
it's defective, that you find out while it's still during that return
policy date. Dealing with Electronic Arts' support is difficult
enough as it is, save for a few representatives. You don't want to
have to deal with something they won't deal with in the first place.
But
what about the kind support representative who managed to get
permission to send me the wireless guitar as a replacement in the
first place? Why didn't he know that he wouldn't be able to send
replacement wireless guitars to Canada? As the supervisor I spoke to
today told me, Electronic Arts' electronic support system
accidentally considered my case number as coming from the United
States, not Canada. When the representative tried to begin the
process of allowing the replacement, the system allowed it. He didn't
bother finishing processing the shipping information because he saw
there were no wireless guitars allocated for shipping to Canada. Had
he tried to input a Canadian address in the system though, he would
have been unable to do so. Why does EA not send replacement wireless
guitars to Canada in the first place? We'll have to wait and see what
the company's spokespeople have to say about it.