BlackTron
Member
Are you a lawyer?
No, but I used to spend a lot of time with lawyers and shoot the shit about cases. I don't see why it matters. Are you guys lawyers? You seem to have an opinion as well.
Are you a lawyer?
Agreed. Patent trolling at its finest and they will go hard to shut them down. Not sure how you can patent open world capturing of creatures that design has been done in numerous games. But with a ball. Its just Palworld stepped on their toes with their popularity and designs.unless nintendo literally has a patent on catching monsters in a ball, I doubt they can actually make a patent infringement argument. imo this is lawfare by nintendo intended to skate on general tech confusion and also bleed pocketpair. their approach to the YUZU lawsuit was similar.
No, but I used to spend a lot of time with lawyers and shoot the shit about cases. I don't see why it matters. Are you guys lawyers? You seem to have an opinion as well.
While they are on that, Nintendo should be releasing hardware that can also brute force these lazy ass designs like the latest Pokemon so that we (the gamers) can enjoy a modicum of performance without compromise to fidelity and scope. It's time for Switch 1 to be put to bed, Switch 2 can't be released soon enough. I just hope it sells well enough that devs completely abandon Switch 1 development as I don't want to see scope of what a game CAN be by limiting it so that it can fit within the confines of the Switch 1.Nintendo should put more pressure on Game Freak to be able to compete with Palworld and their developers rather than focusing on destroying them.
You're assuming they have actually infringed anything at all.
"trade dress" is of the category trademark, which is separate from patents.Look -I'm not making up rules about trade dress here. Whether Palworld falls under an infringement of it is up to the judge. Nintendo may prefer a tactic they perceive more bullet-proof first if they have a patent.
The other angle is not opening with your strongest ammo. You lure the other party into giving away their whole hand first. When they can no longer maneuver and are out of ammo, you hit them with the big Mama. My point is anyone thinking they can tell exactly what Nintendo has, what they think is infringing, and what their plans are, because they announced the lawsuit and this patent, is delusional.
No, I'm certainly not, but you are talking about what "tactics" you would use but since you are not a lawyer you really have no idea. All this "trade dress" talk has nothing to do with the lawsuit. You can keep bringing it up if you want, I guess, but it is irrelevant.
"trade dress" is of the category trademark, which is separate from patents.
Its not that. They are suing for patent infringement which are some of the game mechanics. Which is even worse.
They're only doing this so they can put them and their competition under. If you can call them that. And sending a message.
I wouldn't advise anyone to pay for my legal opinion but I would recommend it for free over average GAF poster. Yeah I shot the shit with lawyers but the reason I connected with them to begin with was being in lawsuits myself which completely opened my eyes to how this game is played.
That's as deep as I'll get into it.
i 100% understand what you're trying to say, all i'm saying is that it corroborates with the idea of Nintendo attempting to use a lawsuit to curb competition.I wouldn't advise anyone to pay for my legal opinion but I would recommend it for free over average GAF poster. Yeah I shot the shit with lawyers but the reason I connected with them to begin with was being in lawsuits myself which completely opened my eyes to how this game is played.
That's as deep as I'll get into it.
i 100% understand what you're trying to say, all i'm saying is that it corroborates with the idea of Nintendo attempting to use a lawsuit to curb competition.
There's a game they don't like existing but the game in question isn't really clearly infringing on anything of them, so they find something, any technicality, to destroy competition and maintain a monopoly. Simple as that, and no one besides nintendo has a reason to support this.
Trade dress can be defined as the overall commercial look and feel of a product. It's the way that consumers identify your goods and sets them apart from others. Like trademarks, trade dress is protected under The Lanham Act and can be registered with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO). Also similar to trademarks, it must be inherently distinctive — and non-functional — in order to receive federal protection.
The packaging of a product, how it is configured, and the visual aspects of the product used for promotional purposes are all elements of trade dress. Critically, any functional aspects of a product are not considered. Only the product's design can be protected as trade dress — an element that is useful for a specific functional purpose cannot.
Trade dress can apply to colors, shapes, sizes, textures, designs, ornamental arrangements, and other non-functional parts of a product's packaging.
Trade dress protection offers several advantages. It can sometimes be considered broader than a design patent because it attaches to any confusingly similar design. Additionally, trade dress protection is not limited to a 15-year term, like a design patent, and can continue for as long as the trade dress is used commercially in the marketplace.
So why not protect every product design as trade dress? First, product trade dress is not protectable unless it has “acquired distinctiveness” in the minds of consumers.
The Coca-Cola bottle serves as an example; its distinctive shape immediately invokes consumer association with the brand, demonstrating its acquired distinctiveness. However, proving acquired distinctiveness can be difficult and usually requires consumer survey evidence or other more costly endeavors. As a result, trade dress protection is less common than design patent protection for product designs.
Trade dress can be protected only if the owner of the trade dress can show the average consumer would be confused as to the origin of a product if another product appears in the same or similar packaging.
Didn't Pokemon blatantly ripoff tons of elements from Dragon Quest decades ago?According to reports, it is probably about catching with the Pokéball or, in this case, the Pallsphere. However, other reports mention several patents. Someone in the other thread posted this a few hours ago.
Whether this is ultimately a violation will have to be decided by judges and not by the forum.
So did Nintendo just wait for them to have money so they could swoop in and take it? Why such a long delay on this?
Lol, in the real world nobody cares about this. This is not a presidential election
I should read what patent means in french then. The gameplay is nothing like Pokemon as far as I know?
What about McDowells and Golden Arcs?Grafting in Satisfactory doesn't mean it's not a monster collecting RPG anymore.
I said "same type of product". Porn parody is the same type of product as the source its ripped from? Parody is protected, ask Weird Al. Parodies getting away with it doesn't prove you can on every circumstance.
McDonalds can shut down a burger joint called McDonalds but not "McDonald & Sons" machine shop. This is the relevance of being the "same type of product".
I always thought that Palworld devs would be bulletproof tho since they are from China
Pocketpair is a small indie game company based in Tokyo.
Theres a difference between direct inspiration and taking a design, putting a hat on top and calling it yours
Only thing they have in common is that based on same animal, the actual designs very different from each other
The title is comedy gold.
I hope Sony and/or Microsoft is supporting Pocketpair behind the scene. Fuck Nintendo.