It reminds me of when Bluehole sued Epic games over the supposed ripping off of Battle Royale Mechanics, and it ended up causing Fortnite to steal it's place as the biggest battle royale game on the market.
"We can try sueing you. maybe some retarded guy rules in our favour. or maybe your will agree to a solution outside of court, cause you don't want to pay for years of lawyer fees."
2 step shake can be argued as 3rd times the charm rule. Do thing twice then it works the 3rd time, unpatentable as its in most video games, typically for boss fights.
On what basis? That release doesn't say anything.
Assuming that Palworld didn't infringe anything, here's hoping they made enough money during early access to properly defend themselves.
On the basis of "we don't like our product being exposed as inferior to yours, and we bet we have more money to blow on lawyers than you do."
It reminds me of when Bluehole sued Epic games over the supposed ripping off of Battle Royale Mechanics, and it ended up causing Fortnite to steal it's place as the biggest battle royale game on the market.
"We can try sueing you. maybe some retarded guy rules in our favour. or maybe your will agree to a solution outside of court, cause you don't want to pay for years of lawyer fees."
I think I saw someone mention mechanics such as ball capturing or something. I haven't played palworld so idk if thats accurate.
That could be. Palworld has a similar mechanic, even the 2 step shake before capture confirmation.
2 step shake can be argued as 3rd times the charm rule. Do thing twice then it works the 3rd time, unpatentable as its in most video games, typically for boss fights.
Nintendo has the patent for throwing something to complete an action.