As more developers confirm, it looks likely that ALL Adult Swim Games titles will be removed by May
As the week has gone on we’ve seen even more developers come out and confirm that they too were contacted by Warner Bros. Discovery — the parent company behind Adult Swim Games — …
I hate it when companies do that shit. “We hold the intellectual property rights and even though we’ve no intention of using them for the foreseeable future, the possibility exists we might want to use them in the unforeseeable future so we will desperately hold onto them.”
There should be some kind of "use it or lose it" in IP law if the IP is purchased by someone else. The idea of IP is to incentivize creativity by allowing creators to profit from their work, not stifle it by allowing rich pedos to buy and sit on it. It should be released to the creator or the public in cases like this.
The fun part is that most of those IP's are worthless outside of their creators.
It tells you that deep down they know the worth of the IPs even if they won't admit to it. If Disney had any sense, with Star Wars they would allow people to make their own entire fan projects and act as a publisher like Valve. Simply take a cut of the action and allow people to upload whatever they like whether that's movies or games or even a television series.
They would make so much fucking money but because these IPs have been taken over by ideologues they won't ever hand it over to fans because that would mean admitting they've lost.
Like Star Wars before hand? There was an application system to get into that. People who couldn't get in made their own series. Check out Steven Kent's Clone Series.
I'm also pretty sure this was a big part of how Star Wars got to be as big as it did. Anyone being able to license a book or game, meant there was plenty of content and natural selection meant only the best stuff succeeded. Disney giving EA an exclusivity deal was one of the early signs that they had no idea what the fuck they were doing.
Big company gets big company to make big game. The logic should be sound but it's not.
The problem wasn't EA getting the rights, but rather EA getting the rights exclusively. They wound up missing out on potential money from other companies and EA actually brought a lot of negative attention, when they pulled that micro-transaction BS with Battlefront 2.
It's not the same thing but I couldn't help but imagine a burglar getting caught and told to return his stolen goods responding with "Look I'd love to help but I just don't have the resources to deliver the items back to the houses I stole them from."
How bizarre. Is there a cost to having a game listed on Steam? Given the millions of trash "games" I've seen there, I can't imagine that's the case. So why delist anything at all?
I looked at the titles getting de-listed and I can't help but notice these games aren't particularly good.