• Kactus@piefed.world
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      2 days ago

      Fun little animal capture Battler with base building and guns. Nintendo sued then for having a mechanic of being able to grow to capture and ride mounts without extra steps. Revised payments in the middle of the law suit too iirc.

    • it_wasnt_arson@awful.systems
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      2 days ago

      A kitchen sink monster taming survival sandbox game with Pokemon-like cute creatures, a handful of reaaaaally familiar designs, edgy shock factor marketing featuring gun violence and animal abuse, and enough obviously Pokemon-inspired gameplay elements that Nintendo decided to bring out all the IP big guns, from copyright infringement down to bullshit mechanics patents and claims that mods don’t count as prior art. (if a modder invents something, no they didn’t, and a developer that puts the same feature in a game years later can sue anyone who imitates the mod, according to Nintendo.)

    • atrielienz@lemmy.world
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      19 hours ago

      Ok. Palworld (a pocket monster style game like Digimon or Pokemon) released in 2024. Some people claimed it stole assets from Pokemon (or heavily plagiarized them). This has since been debunked but continues to be a bone of contention for some.

      Nintendo decided to sue for patent infringement based on game mechanics (not monster design), and apply for new patents on game mechanics like mounts/creature riding mechanics, and the ability to catch creatures to enable the lawsuit against the developer of Palworld, Pocketpair.

      This lawsuit has been ongoing for a couple of years now and in that time, Pocketpair have made changes to Palworld to further differentiate their game’s mechanics from Pokemon games in order to mitigate the damages from the lawsuit.

      If you are so inclined you can read more about it here:

      https://www.ip-brief.com/blogs/nintendo-is-wrong-on-one-patent-claim-against-palworld

      • hemmes@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        Many microblogging and aggregation platform users prefer to ask questions within a thread to keep the conversation active. You can continue scrolling through other posts while waiting for an organic reply from another user.

        • A_Random_Idiot@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          You can also keep a conversation going by being an insufferable cunt, Lets all thank Summzashi for providing an excellent example of this.

        • stray@pawb.social
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          2 days ago

          I’m really glad this appears to be a popular way of thinking. Back in my day people would respond to questions like this with rude “let me Google that for you” links. I always preferred asking humans things rather than looking them up, and I think that’s become really important given the AI hellscape we’re experiencing.

        • Summzashi@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          Nah, a proper question and contribution would be to ask what the lawsuit is about. It’s ridiculous to expect others to explain what a high profile game is, that’s what a search engine is for. It takes literally 5 second or less to Google it and look at screenshots to understand what’s the point here.

          This isn’t contributing anything. If your “active” conversation is nothing more than asking about widely available facts, it’s nothing but noise and might as well not be there.