Frankly, the TOS isn't relevant. Software companies have been and will continue to be sued, and the plaintiffs will continue to get positive judgement outcomes despite the mumbo jumbo language in most TOS. As another poster stated, the legal binding-ness of any electronic terms is suspect at best. Heck, even real physical paper contracts with signatures in blue or black ink are successfully litigated against in court.
Tynon can lean on their TOS for matters of discipline and all the internal business of the game. But once you get people paying real money for whatever you claim you're offering, that begins to delve into real life actual law and jurisprudence. And if people feel moved to utilize the judicial system available to them, that TOS will fall like a house of cards. That is why those of us who have administered online communities with any seriousness make darned sure we understand what we can and can't be sued for. And why many of us take things like harassment very seriously, no matter what the verbiage in our TOSs state as far as our actual liability.
Besides, if you have a credit card company worth anything at all, they'll happily do a chargeback on your behalf to keep your business. Most companies do have a time limit to request such a thing. Tynon has every right to totally block/ban/restrict your access if you do happen to do a chargeback, so I certainly wouldn't use this option unless you were darned sure you never wanted to be involved in the game again.


