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Tencent accuse Sony of trying "to fence off a well-trodden corner of popular culture" with their Horizon copyright lawsuit
Game Updates

Tencent accuse Sony of trying “to fence off a well-trodden corner of popular culture” with their Horizon copyright lawsuit

by admin September 18, 2025



This afternoon, a choice of two raging videogame lawsuits to report on. Firstly, a snippet from the on-going courtroom scrap between former Unknown Worlds executives and Krafton over the state of Subnautica 2’s development, in which the former accuse the latter of changing their story about why the executives were fired.

I’ve decided not to write that one up because it feels like we are entering the realm of potshots over minutiae, rather than learning anything genuinely new about Subnautica 2 or its creators, but if you’re interested, GamesIndustry.biz has your back. The parallel Tencent/Sony bust-up has the virtue of relative novelty. It gives me a whole different kind of headache. What’s going on with this one, then?


Well, last November Tencent announced that they would publish Light Of Motiram, a post-apocalyptic adventure featuring robot mammoths, archery, red-haired ladies, and scrapmetal tribal aesthetics. An ungenerous commenter might assert that it’s a “slavish clone” of Sony’s Horizon Zero Dawn and Horizon Forbidden West. That’s what Sony called it, anyway, when they announced in July this year that they were going to sue Tencent back to the Neo-Stone Age for copyright infringement.


In their California federal court filing, Sony alleged that Tencent had, in fact, approached them in 2024 and pitched a new Horizon game under license, even as development continued on Light of Motiram. As James noted in our write-up, the implication here is that Tencent were going to make their very own Horizon game regardless of whether Sony consented to brand it an official sequel or spin-off.


Sony sought to block Light Of Motiram’s release, arguing that it would cause “irreparable harm to SIE and the consuming public”, which is rather histrionic. I am picturing a solitary tear rolling down the face of a member of the Consuming Public as they plead with the storekeeper that they wanted the other 6/10 metal dinosaur game, not this one. Yes, it is I – the Horizon disliker. Still, I can’t deny that the games look rather similar, and it’s telling that Tencent have edited Light Of Motiram’s Steam page to remove some of the more obvious points of overlap with Horizon.


Tencent have now hit back against Sony’s accusations with even louder language. They contend that Sony are seeking “an impermissible monopoly on genre conventions”, and that Light Of Motiram ain’t even finished yet and as such, can’t be fairly assessed for what it invents or borrows. They also say that Sony are suing the wrong people.


As passed on by The Game Post, Tencent’s motion to dismiss the case comments that “at bottom, Sony’s effort is not aimed at fighting off piracy, plagiarism, or any genuine threat to intellectual property. It is an improper attempt to fence off a well-trodden corner of popular culture and declare it Sony’s exclusive domain.”


Tencent further argue that Sony’s claims for Horizon Zero Dawn’s originality have been “flatly contradicted” by developers Guerrilla, citing a behind-the-scenes doc in which art director Jan-Bart Van Beek compared the game to Ninja Theory’s 2013 action-adventure Enslaved: Odyssey to the West. They also make reference to “the long history of video games featuring the same elements that Sony seeks to monopolise through this lawsuit”.


They insist that Light Of Motiram “merely employs the same time-honoured tropes embraced by scores of other games released both before and after Horizon – like Enslaved, The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild, Far Cry: Primal, Far Cry: New Dawn, Outer Wilds, Biomutant, and many more”. In summary, they accuse Sony of trying to “transform ubiquitous genre ingredients into proprietary assets.”


As regards Sony’s argument that Tencent wanted to make a Horizon game for them, and decided to proceed with their “slavish clone” despite not being given permission, Tencent’s court motion refers to a GDC meeting from March 2024 in which Tencent reps pitched a licensed Horizon mobile game. They claim that since no actual Tencent executives or employees were at the meeting, nothing at the meeting “is alleged to be an act of copyright or trademark infringement”.


As for the ‘suing the wrong people stuff’, Tencent’s motion notes that Sony’s lawsuit is against Tencent America, Proxima Beta U.S., and Tencent Holdings, whereas Light Of Motiram is being developed and published by Polaris Quest / Aurora Studios, who operate under Tencent Technology (Shanghai) Co. Ltd, and Proxima Beta PTE Ltd, a company in Singapore “doing business as ‘Tencent Games’ and/or ‘Level Infinite'”. Tencent’s lawyers are of the opinion that “Sony’s threadbare, conclusory allegations improperly lump these Defendants together with the foreign companies alleged to be responsible for the core conduct at issue.”


I’m no lawyer, despite belated efforts to educate myself, but the last two paragraphs read to me like Tencent are trying to get off on a technicality. I sympathise more with the line about Horizon not being as original as all that, and certain ideas being public property. Except that I’m pretty sure that if the roles were reversed and Light of Motiram had launched before Horizon: Zero Dawn, Tencent would have been yelling blue murder about breach of copyright.

The discussion of what Light Of Motiram – out 2027 – yoinks or doesn’t yoink from Horizon is kind of fun to follow, because it’s comparing ideas and aesthetics. In general, though, I default to the position that picking sides in a copyright spat between two billion dollar videogame publishers is like deciding which cybernetic T-Rex you most want to step on you.



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September 18, 2025 0 comments
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NFT Gaming

Amended Lawsuit Accuses TaskUs of Concealing Coinbase Data Breach

by admin September 17, 2025



In brief

  • The amended complaint claims TaskUs’s India operations were at the center of a coordinated bribery scheme to steal customer information.
  • Plaintiffs allege the company concealed the breach, firing investigators and failing to disclose details in securities filings before a $1.6 billion Blackstone buyout.
  • Coinbase reimbursed affected users, tightened controls, and ended its relationship with TaskUs, Decrypt was told.

Amendments to a class action in New York against TaskUs have added new claims of systemic security failures and concealment in a breach tied to Coinbase customer data.

The amended complaint, filed on Tuesday at the Southern District of New York, adds key elements to earlier disclosures about how Coinbase’s customer data was handled across the timeline of the massive breach, from its origins in late 2024 to Coinbase’s eventual disclosure in May, with losses estimated to reach as much as $400 million.

“This was a criminal bribery scheme beginning in late 2024 that exploited both external vendors and a small number of Coinbase CX staff outside the U.S., enabling social-engineering scams against less than 1% of monthly transacting users,” a Coinbase spokesperson told Decrypt.



The crypto exchange said it notified affected users and regulators immediately, and reimbursed impacted customers as it tightened vendor and insider controls.

Coinbase has since ended its relationship with TaskUs, refusing to “pay the criminals” instead creating “a $20 million reward for information leading to arrests and convictions,” the spokesperson confirmed with Decrypt.

TaskUs did not immediately return Decrypt’s requests for comment.

Key changes to the complaint describe a coordinated scheme inside TaskUs’s India operations, where employees were allegedly bribed to photograph sensitive account information and pass it to criminals. Plaintiffs say the conspiracy spread beyond front-line staff, prompting TaskUs to dismiss around 300 employees in January.

‘Coordinated criminal campaign’

The outsourcing firm’s public statements allegedly “belie a far broader and coordinated criminal campaign that involved dozens, if not hundreds of TaskUs employees,” the complaint reads.

The filing also accuses TaskUs of concealing the scope of the breach. According to plaintiffs, the company “ took steps to silence those with knowledge of the breach” and fired its own human resources personnel tasked with investigating the breach in February.

It later continued to tell regulators it had suffered no material breach, and moved ahead with a $1.6 billion buyout through Blackstone before Coinbase acknowledged the incident in May.

A Form 10-K filing from TaskUs in February did not cite any factors pertaining to the Coinbase breach, which meant that it was effectively claiming it “was not aware of any material data breach impacting the company,” before Coinbase acknowledged the incident in May, the amended complaint alleged.

The amended complaint also expands on claims that TaskUs ignored Section 5 of the FTC Act, framing the lapses as systemic rather than isolated.

Those standards guide “what businesses should do to avoid ‘unfair’ or ‘deceptive’ practices, Andrew Rossow, public affairs attorney and CEO of AR Media Consulting, told Decrypt. “While not all guidance is legally binding, ignoring it can show that a company was careless or misleading.”

Courts and regulators are weighing whether the compromised data was sensitive enough to expose people to identity theft or financial loss, Rossow explained. 

They will also examine whether safeguards such as encryption or multi-factor authentication were employed, whether the risks were foreseeable, whether security promises aligned with reality, and whether consumers had any means to protect themselves.

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September 17, 2025 0 comments
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Gaming Gear

Check Your Bank Accounts, You Might Spot a Deposit From a Facebook Lawsuit

by admin September 16, 2025


Read your email carefully this week: On Monday morning, I received an email from PayPal with the enticing subject line, “Your Facebook Consumer Privacy User Profile Litigation Settlement Payment.” And no, it wasn’t a scam. I opened it to find my PayPal account had been sent $37.55 as my share of Facebook’s $725 million privacy settlement. 

Don’t miss any of our unbiased tech content and lab-based reviews. Add CNET as a preferred Google source.

I was glad I spotted the email, because the money would’ve sat there in PayPal until I made a PayPal purchase. Instead, I chose to transfer it to my bank, where it’s expected to show up by Thursday.

That’s the good news. The bad news is that if you neglected to file a claim by the 2023 deadline, you’re out of luck.

This all stems from what might be the largest privacy settlement in US history: Facebook’s parent company, Meta, is paying $725 million to settle claims involving the sharing of user data with third-party companies.

Back in 2018, Facebook was accused of improperly disclosing users’ personal information. Cambridge Analytica, a UK political consulting firm with ties to Donald Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign, ended up with the data of as many as 87 million Facebook users. Meta denied any wrongdoing, saying in a 2023 statement that it agreed to the deal because “it’s in the best interest of our community and shareholders.”

A representative for Meta did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The amount you receive depends on how long you had an active Facebook account.

Screenshot by Gael Fashingbauer Cooper/CNET

Payment amounts differ

The official website for the lawsuit has more information about settlement payments. It notes that settlement payments are being sent only to class members with approved claims. Distribution of the payments will continue over the next 10 weeks. If your claim is approved, a notification will be sent to your email a few days before your payment is issued.

If you are unsure of the status of your claim form and would like to check, you can send an email to the Settlement Administrator at info@facebookuserprivacysettlement.com, but you must include your Claim ID.

Some recipients will be paid via direct deposit, Venmo, Zelle, a mailed check or a virtual prepaid MasterCard, based on the method they chose when they filed their claim. I certainly didn’t remember which method I chose back then, but the PayPal email jogged my memory.

Your settlement amount might be slightly different from mine. The website says authorized claimants receive one point for each month in which they had an active Facebook account during the class period. The number of points helps determine the amount you’re paid.

According to CBS News, the average payment amount is $29.43, and the maximum payout is $38.36.



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September 16, 2025 0 comments
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'Blade Runner 2099' Gets Official 2026 Window by Prime Video
Product Reviews

The Tesla ‘Blade Runner 2049’ AI Lawsuit Just Hit an Interesting Snag

by admin September 16, 2025


In April, movement on a 2024 lawsuit involving AI, Tesla, Warner Bros., and the production company behind Blade Runner 2049 caught the attention of sci-fi fans. Today, there’s an update that skews in favor of Warner Bros.

Alcon Entertainment, which produced the 2017 Denis Villeneuve film and has the Prime Video Blade Runner 2099 series on the way, alleged that promotional material used at an October 2024 Tesla event very closely resembled stills from that film.

Those concerns were further heightened by the fact that Alcon had asked Warner Bros., which distributes its films and was partnering with Tesla for a “robotaxi” or “Cybercab” unveiling, not to allow the use of Blade Runner 2049 imagery as part of the event.

The ensuing lawsuit alleges that Tesla circumvented that request by feeding Blade Runner 2049 stills into an AI image generator, and that’s what was eventually used to backdrop the Tesla presentation.

The lawsuit touches on several complicated issues, including, as the Hollywood Reporter points out, “whether the creation of a visual by an AI image generator by copying a portion of a copyrighted work without a license constitutes copyright infringement.” That’s one of the as-yet undecided issues in the ongoing proceedings.

As THR reports, now dismissed are “claims seeking to hold Warner Bros. Discovery responsible for Tesla’s use of the photos” as well as “another claim alleging that Warner Bros. Discovery had a duty to stop Tesla from infringing Alcon’s intellectual property.”

However, “Warner Bros. Discovery still faces a claim for contributory infringement, which accuses the studio of facilitating the alleged misconduct.”

You can read more about the lawsuit in THR; the complexities of this specific case, however, are coming at a time when Hollywood is facing issues centered on AI’s encroachment of intellectual property on an unprecedented scale.

Earlier this month, we learned that Warner Bros. joined Disney and Universal in filing a lawsuit against Midjourney; as Variety reported, the allegations accuse “the AI image-generating platform of blatant copyright violations” involving copyrighted WB characters.

We don’t know yet how Alcon, which (per THR) has one more try to “fix claims for direct and vicarious copyright infringement,” will ultimately fare in its legal fight. But even if Warner Bros. ends up overcoming the remaining claims in this case, it seems the studio has now taken new interest in protecting its library from copyright infringement with generative AI elsewhere.

Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.



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September 16, 2025 0 comments
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Gaming Gear

Google faces its first AI Overviews lawsuit from a major US publisher

by admin September 14, 2025


Even though Google’s AI Overviews were introduced with a comically rocky start, it’s about to face a far more serious challenge. Penske Media, the publisher for Rolling Stone, Variety, Billboard and others, filed a lawsuit against Google, claiming the tech giant illegally powers its AI Overviews feature with content from its sites. Penske claimed in the lawsuit that the AI feature is also “siphoning and discouraging user traffic to PMC’s and other publishers’ websites,” adding that “the revenue generated by those visits will decline.”

The lawsuit, filed in Washington, DC’s federal district court, claims that about 20 percent of Google searches that link to one of Penske’s sites now have AI Overviews. The media company argued that this percentage will continue to increase and that its affiliate revenue through 2024 dropped by more than a third from its peak. Google spokesperson Jose Castaneda said that the tech giant will “defend against these meritless claims” and that “AI Overviews send traffic to a greater diversity of sites.”

Earlier this year, Google faced a similar lawsuit from Chegg, an educational tech company that’s known for textbook rentals. Like Penske Media, this lawsuit alleged that Google’s AI Overviews hurt website traffic and revenue for Chegg. However, the Penske lawsuit is the first time that Google has faced legal action from a major US publisher about its AI search capabilities.

Beyond Google’s legal troubles, other AI companies have also been facing their own court cases. In 2023, the New York Times sued OpenAI, claiming the AI company used published news articles to train its chatbots without offering compensation. More recently, Anthropic agreed to pay a $1.5 billion settlement in a class action lawsuit targeting its Claude chatbot’s use of copyrighted works.



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September 14, 2025 0 comments
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Product Reviews

Roblox hit with wrongful death lawsuit following a teen player’s suicide

by admin September 13, 2025


Following her son’s suicide, Becca Dallas filed a potentially groundbreaking lawsuit against Roblox and Discord, accusing the platforms of wrongful death. As first reported by The New York Times, the lawsuit recounts the events leading up to Ethan Dallas’ death, detailing his interactions with a player named Nate. According to the report, Nate was likely a 37-year-old man named Timothy O’Connor, who was previously arrested on charges of “possessing child pornography and transmitting harmful material to minors.” The report added that Ethan opened up about these incidents to his mom before committing suicide four months after the confession.

The lawsuit could be the first of its kind against Roblox, according to NYTimes, considering it attributes some blame to the gaming platform that’s home to tens of millions of underaged players. In a statement responding to the report, a Roblox spokesperson said that child safety issues are seen across the industry and that the company was working on new safety features, while also complying with law enforcement.

This isn’t the first time Roblox has faced complaints of being a dangerous place for underage players. In August, Louisiana’s attorney general, Liz Murrill, filed a lawsuit that claimed Roblox doesn’t “implement basic safety controls” to protect its underage user base. That lawsuit follows a similar investigation launched by Florida’s attorney general James Uthmeier, who demanded answers to the reports of Roblox reportedly exposing kids to “harmful content and bad actors.” Roblox has taken steps to combat these allegations, including tightening restrictions on its Experiences, and more recently, expanding its age estimation tool to all users.



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September 13, 2025 0 comments
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French Lara Croft actor starts lawsuit over alleged AI-generated voice lines in Aspyr's Tomb Raider remasters
Game Updates

French Lara Croft actor starts lawsuit over alleged AI-generated voice lines in Aspyr’s Tomb Raider remasters

by admin September 12, 2025


Françoise Cadol, the long-time French voice actor for Lara Croft, has reportedly launched legal action against Tomb Raider IV-VI Remastered publishers Aspyr over alleged use of generative AI to replicate her voice for lines in the game. Cadol claims Aspyr didn’t contact her to ask for permission, and it appears the voice of Croft in at least one other dub of the remasters may have been put in a similar position.

According to a report from French publication Le Parisien, spotted by TheGamer, Cadol has issued a cease and desist to Aspyr over the matter.

We’ve reached out to Aspyr for comment.

It looks like the alleged AI-generated lines may have been added to the game by Patch 2 in mid-August. The notes for that patch include one that reads: “Restored missing or incorrect voiceover lines in various languages (especially Brazilian Portuguese)”.

Cadol told Le Parisien she’d been alerted to the possible use of genAI to mimic her lines in the remaster by Tomb Raider fans, who’ve circulated what they believe to be examples of it happening on social media. Some of the lines supposedly using genAI in the remaster look to be tutorial instructions telling you how to do things like climb, with the comparison below featuring some different wording in the Remastered versions of some lines. The apparent genAI lines have a more robotic edge to them, in contrast to the natural inflections Cadol speaks with in the original.

🇫🇷 ALERTE INFO — Le patch des remasters de Tomb Raider IV, V et VI par @AspyrMedia vient de sortir…

Mauvaise surprise pour les fans français de Lara Croft, certaines répliques de Françoise Cadol dans le tutoriel ont été refaites avec l’IA et ça s’entend ! pic.twitter.com/YRbZsY669H

— Bastien D. Fry  (@BastienDruker) August 15, 2025

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The French version isn’t the only dub of the game to have allegedly done this. Lene Bastos, Croft’s Brazilian Portuguese actor, has posted a video to Instagram stating that Tomb Raider fans have informed her that some of voice lines appear to have been subject to AI generation in the remasters. Bastos claims to have recieved a message from Aspyr about it, with the publishers putting the blame at the feet of an external development partner and telling her the lines will soon be removed in the game’s next patch.

Voice actors fighting for protections against the possibility of companies using generative AI to mimic their voices was a key element of the SAG-AFTRA strike that concluded a few months ago. “Basically you have to get our consent to make a digital replica of us,” Horizon and Borderlands voice actor Ashly Burch told the BBC when the strike was suspended. “You have to tell us how you’re going to use it, and then you have to compensate us fairly.”





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September 12, 2025 0 comments
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NFT Gaming

Bitcoin Giant Strategy Dodges Another Lawsuit Alleging Accounting Wrongs

by admin September 10, 2025



In brief

  • A lawsuit against Bitcoin treasury Strategy has been scrapped.
  • Much like a different lawsuit dismissed in August, this one alleged shady accounting practices.
  • A number of lawsuits have been brought against Strategy this year, Decrypt previously reported.

Another shareholder lawsuit alleging dodgy accounting practices at Bitcoin treasury giant Strategy has been dropped, court documents show. 

Documents filed Wednesday show the scrapped case, brought in June by shareholders Abhey Parmar and Zhenqiu Chen, had alleged breaches of fiduciary duties, unjust enrichment, abuse of control, and gross mismanagement in the company. 

The dismissal comes just weeks after a different class-action lawsuit accusing the company of misleading shareholders about how new accounting rules would affect its profitability was scrapped. That lawsuit, filed in May, was similar to the June one dismissed Wednesday.

A number of law firms and stockholders this year filed lawsuits against the company, alleging securities fraud over misleading Bitcoin investment statements. 

Experts told Decrypt that it wasn’t unusual for law firms to file identical lawsuits against a company, as they vied to become lead counsel in a consolidated case.

Strategy—formerly MicroStrategy—is the world’s biggest corporate holder of Bitcoin, with a stash of 638,460 digital coins worth $72.5 billion at today’s prices. 



The company mainly used to sell data analysis software, but now buys and holds Bitcoin and lets investors buy shares of its Nasdaq-listed stock (MSTR) to get exposure to the cryptocurrency, dubbing itself a Bitcoin treasury firm.

Company co-founder Michael Saylor was turned on to Bitcoin in 2020, bought it, and claimed it was the best way to store value and save shareholders’ money.

Strategy stock has since soared. It was trading for $14 the day the company first bought Bitcoin in August 2020 and it’s now trading for $362—a 2,160% increase.

Strategy has in the past run into trouble with regulators. In 2000, Saylor, who was Strategy CEO at the time, co-founder and Chief Operating Officer Sanjeev Bansal, and former Chief Financial Officer Mark Lynch settled a case with the SEC, without admitting or denying charges of overstating the company’s revenue and earnings. 

The three paid $10 million in disgorgement and $1 million in penalties. 

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September 10, 2025 0 comments
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Nintendo and accessories manufacturer Genki settles Switch 2 trademark infringement lawsuit
Game Updates

Nintendo and accessories manufacturer Genki settles Switch 2 trademark infringement lawsuit

by admin September 9, 2025


Nintendo’s lawsuit against accessory manufacturer Genki, which earlier this year debuted a mock-up Switch 2 unit before the console had actually been officially unveiled, has come to an end.

Back in May, Nintendo filed a copyright claim against Genki, when it accused the manufacturer of “capitalising” on demand for Switch 2 news and giving “contradictory and inconsistent” statements.

Nintendo and Genki have now reached a settlement, without any further need for a trial. As per official court documents, Genki is required to pay an undisclosed amount to Nintendo for damages.


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In addition, Genki along with all other subsidiaries of its parent company Human Things are banned from using any Nintendo logo, design or “anything confusingly similar thereto”, in “any manner in connection with its business”.

Genki is now also prohibited from using approximations such as ‘Glitch’, ‘Glitch 2’, ‘Genki Direct’ and ‘Genki Indirect’ when promoting its own products, with these of course being very close to Nintendo’s own Switch and Nintendo Direct-related branding.

The accessories manufacturer is also no longer able to use colour schemes in any of its products or packaging which are “confusingly or substantially” similar to Nintendo’s. The court document states: “Namely, red and white, red and blue, green and pink, blue and yellow, purple and orange, pink and yellow, and purple and green.”

You can read the full court document here.

This is a news-in-brief story. This is part of our vision to bring you all the big news as part of a daily live report.



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September 9, 2025 0 comments
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Court Orders Man To Pay Nintendo $2 Million To Settle Modding And Piracy Lawsuit
Game Updates

Court Orders Man To Pay Nintendo $2 Million To Settle Modding And Piracy Lawsuit

by admin September 8, 2025



Nintendo has secured another payout from a lawsuit it pursued against a producer of products designed to help pirate Switch games. Already notorious for its hardline approach to piracy, modding, and emulation, Nintendo has been granted a monetary judgment under which the target of the lawsuit must pay the company $2 million.

As spotted by X user OatmealDome, Ryan Michael Daly was found by a district court in Washington to have damaged Nintendo through his production and sale of modded devices. According to the court document reviewed by GameSpot, he created products “primarily designed for the purpose of circumventing the TPMs [technological protection measures].” The court also found that Daly’s actions “caused NOA [Nintendo of America] significant and irreparable harm.” 

Along with having to pay $2 million to Nintendo, the modder is also permanently prohibited from taking any future action to evade Nintendo’s security or digital rights protection systems or to give guidance to other people in modding or pirating Nintendo property. The court order also mandates the seizure and destruction of any devices that Daly used in running his modding business.

This is not the first time that Nintendo has pursued stringent penalties against individuals who create software or hardware that can be used to pirate games. In one of the most notorious cases, the hacker Gary Bowser (really his name) was ordered to pay $15 million to Nintendo after serving prison time, and the company is allowed to garnish his wages until the whole amount is paid.

Nintendo has also increasingly cracked down on creators and advertisers of emulation software. Last year, for instance, it worked with YouTube to apply copyright strikes to creators who show off emulated Nintendo games and devices.



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September 8, 2025 0 comments
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