A forum for discussing and organizing recreational softball and baseball games and leagues in the greater Halifax area.
Epic Games Store is Removing a Game from Players' Libraries due to legal troubles
-
Put it in the fucking title.Dark and Darker
-
This post did not contain any content.It's a free to play game so just redownload it on Steam.
-
Dark and DarkerYeah, I read the other guy's comment. That is already one step too many. I still had to click, for that bait. OP: *put it in the fucking title.*
-
It's a free to play game so just redownload it on Steam.
-
There's also an upgrade that isn't free that's being removed. Granted the upgrade was one of their freebie offers relatively recent.It uses its own account system, so if you had that content you should still have access to it on the platforms that *aren't* removing it, right?
-
It uses its own account system, so if you had that content you should still have access to it on the platforms that *aren't* removing it, right?I'm not one hundred percent sure, but the email I got from Epic says they're refunding the legendary upgrade and that Redstone shards are only good until November 1st. I don't actually play the game, but I got the email because I got the legendary upgrade when it was a freebie.
-
Yeah, I read the other guy's comment. That is already one step too many. I still had to click, for that bait. OP: *put it in the fucking title.*OP: Thank you.
-
This post did not contain any content.> This happened because the developers allegedly used assets from a game calledย *P3*, which was never released, and therefore not subject to copyright infringement claims. That isnโt how copyright works. Copyright is awarded upon creation of a work, not upon release.
-
> This happened because the developers allegedly used assets from a game calledย *P3*, which was never released, and therefore not subject to copyright infringement claims. That isnโt how copyright works. Copyright is awarded upon creation of a work, not upon release.While not subject to copyright laws, it definetly counts as theft. If I'm working on a drawing and someone steals it before I complete it, it's theft.
-
While not subject to copyright laws, it definetly counts as theft. If I'm working on a drawing and someone steals it before I complete it, it's theft.Copyright applies to unfinished works, too. There are many reasons it might not protect an unfinished work, but those reasons are still relevant even for finished works. If someone steals your physical drawing, thatโs theft. If they take a picture of it, then use the picture - or your picture + modifications - without your permission, particularly in a commercial work, then thatโs copyright infringement, but not theft. If they steal your physical drawing and then take a picture and so on, then itโs both theft and copyright infringement. Most likely this wasnโt considered copyright infringement because the allegedly copied art isnโt copyrightable, e.g., game mechanics; or the plaintiff didnโt own the copyrights themselves and thus couldnโt sue (possibly the arts were still copyrighted by the original artists, having never been purchased; possibly they were stock assets that were re-purchased by the defendant). There are any number of reasons. However, โthe work wasnโt publishedโ isnโt one of them. On the other hand, itโs quite likely they were able to sue for theft of trade secrets for that very reason. And they might have chosen to do that simply because proving copyright infringement is much more difficult.