Nintendo plans to sue Palworld-maker Pocketpair

Rikudou_Sage@lemmings.world to Games@sh.itjust.works – 113 points –
Nintendo, The Pokemon Company sue Palworld-maker Pocketpair
arstechnica.com

Shitendo strikes again

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They are suing over a patent though (ie, a technology). What you are talking about is a copyright suit.

Unfortunately we don’t know what patents Nintendo is suing over. And I struggle to think of a patent issue that would generate a good faith claim.

Yes, from I've read they haven't quoted any specific patent to anyone. They don't have good grounds, they just want it shut down.

Looks like it's over the game mechanics of 'releasing a creature into a 3d environment and having it perform a contextual task' & 'having a rideable mount switch to a different rideable mount depending on terrain'

I don't think either of these would work in the US, because you can't protect game mechanics here, but I'm not sure about Japan's take.

Edit: I missed that this was still under speculation at the time of the post:

https://bulbagarden.net/threads/nintendo-and-the-pokemon-company-jointly-file-lawsuit-for-patent-infringement-against-palworld-creator-pocketpair-inc-in-the-tokyo-district-court.303354/

Based on searching of Japanese patent databases, initial speculation is that these may include (but is not necessarily limited to) patents relating to game mechanics and gameplay features from Pokémon: Legends Arceus, and may include patents such as one for throwing and using Poké Balls in a 3D space (JP,2023-092953,A); and one for automatically switching between ride Pokémon as a player transitions between different terrain, such as between air and the ground (JP,2023-092954,A).

They haven't actually said what the alleged infringement is yet, so we can't know for sure what excuse they're going to come up with. They haven't even told Pocketpair!

You are correct, I missed that it was still under speculation.

Kinda wild that you could patent a super basic mechanic that pretty much anyone could come up with

Pocketpair has a pretty good case against Nintendo here, I think, because other games have used these things before.

I know it was never actually released, but Scalebound had a mechanic that would have allowed a player to tell their dragon to perform a task, albeit, usually destructively.

Guild Wars 2 Added a mechanic years ago that let players traverse water and land by automatically a switching between mounts.

'Releasing' a creature into a 3d environment has been done by every minion-mancer class in an MMO since the dawn of the genre.

Okay they need to lose that first one wtf.