Quoting Aaron Maupin <mau...@pastrytech.com>:

I wouldn't want to be the person responsible when a game destroys
someone's C: directory or even just installs a "screensaver" utility.
Advertising "Play Game Online" gives users a false sense of security.
Many kids, for example, are not allowed to download games; their
parents restrict them to browser based games.  You definitely need some
sort of obvious notice that executables are running outside of a
sandbox and can do absolutely anything they like to a user's system.

In browser games can do the same thing. I could add an "About Play Game Online" link that tells how the system works.

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