When players decide to accept or reject the settlement plan the matter is sent back to the Federal courts in Minnesota. If enough players opt out, the judge could choose to resume talks between plaintiffs and Madden 24 coins the league however, there is no time limit for that to happen.

Some believe they are right that the judge Paul Magnuson, will be able to decide whether or not to bring both parties back to the table for negotiations. When Magnuson confirmed the Madden NFL 24's settlement proposal in April, he wrote:

"It must be said again: those who initially brought this suit and now do not support the settlement, rode into court on the banner of saving their downtrodden brethren that had previously played at the N.F.L. but were today in debt and, often, suffering from illnesses or injuries directly related to their play. It's an act of disingenuousness for these same plaintiffs to now complain about being treated like children who have no dessert that the settlement did not adequately benefit the plaintiffs who brought the lawsuit."

The players who choose to not participate in the settlement may then file individual lawsuits with the League. They could be more encouraged to file a lawsuit due to recent development in the O'Bannon. NCAA case, too, now that former college players are filing lawsuits over their likeness appearing in video games.

In July in July, The Ninth Circuit threw out an appeal filed by video game maker EA Sports. The court rejected the argument put forth by EA that player-likeness was protected under the First Amendment and it will let the case proceed.

The Dryer plaintiffs are watching that case closely. They're also keeping an eye on another suit made by thousands members of the former Madden NFL 24 athletes over concussions.

"I believe there's an element of coincidence in the environment in this case," Dryer said of the two cases. "The Madden NFL 24 is extremely shrewd and naive at the concussion issue.

"There's a predisposed notion [from"all of the" cheap mut 24 coins of 'we want that, we're going to accept that.' There's an arrogance in there."