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retrocrush wrote:Hasbro is in the process of suing Scrabulous for their Scrabble knockoff. Obviously, all of the other maps aren't a trademark infringement, but it seems like it could be argued that the ability to play the classic map on this site could be argued as infringement. I'd never play any sort of computer version of RISK because this site is a great substitute. Has this sort of argument been addressed before, or discussed with a lawyer to ensure the right precautions are made? Seems like the little "we're not associated with" isn't enough, and the same thing that Scrabulous did.
Ditocoaf wrote:retrocrush wrote:Hasbro is in the process of suing Scrabulous for their Scrabble knockoff. Obviously, all of the other maps aren't a trademark infringement, but it seems like it could be argued that the ability to play the classic map on this site could be argued as infringement. I'd never play any sort of computer version of RISK because this site is a great substitute. Has this sort of argument been addressed before, or discussed with a lawyer to ensure the right precautions are made? Seems like the little "we're not associated with" isn't enough, and the same thing that Scrabulous did.
Yes, I'm fairly sure they trademarked the gameplay of their game, besides. That's what makes Risk Risk, isn't it? So merely changing the appearance and name hardly seems legal. Perhaps someone should bring this to Hasbro's attention?
Bruceswar wrote:Ditocoaf wrote:retrocrush wrote:Hasbro is in the process of suing Scrabulous for their Scrabble knockoff. Obviously, all of the other maps aren't a trademark infringement, but it seems like it could be argued that the ability to play the classic map on this site could be argued as infringement. I'd never play any sort of computer version of RISK because this site is a great substitute. Has this sort of argument been addressed before, or discussed with a lawyer to ensure the right precautions are made? Seems like the little "we're not associated with" isn't enough, and the same thing that Scrabulous did.
Yes, I'm fairly sure they trademarked the gameplay of their game, besides. That's what makes Risk Risk, isn't it? So merely changing the appearance and name hardly seems legal. Perhaps someone should bring this to Hasbro's attention?
It would never hold up in a court of law. Hasbro owns nothing of a sort. Nowhere does this say Risk anywhere on the site. Cased close.
Bruceswar wrote:
It would never hold up in a court of law. Hasbro owns nothing of a sort. Nowhere does this say Risk anywhere on the site. Cased close.
retrocrush wrote:Bruceswar wrote:
It would never hold up in a court of law. Hasbro owns nothing of a sort. Nowhere does this say Risk anywhere on the site. Cased close.
It doesn't have to. The name is the Trademark, the gameplay is the copyright.
Scrabulous doesn't say Scrabble anywhere on the site either.
Hasbro could argue that they sold the game rights to another company, so CC's online play infringes on the authorized rights. They resell that RISK brand like crazy to many other board game variants. Seems like it's a very real possibility that they come knocking with a cease/desist here someday.
retrocrush wrote:Actually, from some other things I read, they could threaten, but really don't have too much of a case. You can't really protect a game, per se, apparently. Just the logo, image, board, and actual instructions. Since a Risk Map isn't really such a unique innovation, and maps of the world have existed long before, it'd be tough.
Not to say that they wouldn't be pricks. I read elsewhere that they went after college kids who were selling alternative Risk rules, but it was just a threat they couldn't back up.
SlayerQC wrote:Btw, electronic arts will do the license version of scrabble on facebook now.
SlayerQC wrote:Scrabulous was IDENTICAL to scrabble.
Conquer club isnt, even the classic map gameplay.
Can someone sue me if I create a new game with a deck of 52 cards? (bad example but still)
Army of GOD wrote:This thread is now about my large penis
DaGip wrote:First off, Risk is a physical board game that you play on a table top or on the floor. You open the game box, flip open the board, and take out all those little men/horse/cannon plastic game pieces, whereas, CC is a virtual gaming environment with only numbers, not little plastic pieces. In addition, each CC map is of a different design, of which Risk/Hasbro do not in anyway own a copyright of. We can all make maps and play games on them and Hasbro can't say diddley squat.
Also, CC randomly places armies on the board for you, while in Risk, each player chooses where they place each of their starting pieces. Risk doesn't offer all the different features of which CC can provide, so therefore, CC is a different gaming environment all together. Try to play FOW on a Risk board...you just can't do it!
retrocrush wrote:DaGip wrote:First off, Risk is a physical board game that you play on a table top or on the floor. You open the game box, flip open the board, and take out all those little men/horse/cannon plastic game pieces, whereas, CC is a virtual gaming environment with only numbers, not little plastic pieces. In addition, each CC map is of a different design, of which Risk/Hasbro do not in anyway own a copyright of. We can all make maps and play games on them and Hasbro can't say diddley squat.
Also, CC randomly places armies on the board for you, while in Risk, each player chooses where they place each of their starting pieces. Risk doesn't offer all the different features of which CC can provide, so therefore, CC is a different gaming environment all together. Try to play FOW on a Risk board...you just can't do it!
I get you for the non classic maps. To be fair, though, there is a currently available computer version of RISK that has random territory assignments as an option.
Army of GOD wrote:This thread is now about my large penis
gdeangel wrote:But the bottom line is that, having been around and built up a decent amount of content, Classic is actually this site's weakest link. I for one "never" play it. And frankly it should be taken down before it becomes a legal albatross.
e_i_pi wrote:gdeangel wrote:But the bottom line is that, having been around and built up a decent amount of content, Classic is actually this site's weakest link. I for one "never" play it. And frankly it should be taken down before it becomes a legal albatross.
Agreed. Removal of the Classic map would solve the most egregious problem with copyright. I also agree with an earlier post (can't remember who) about the significant changes in gameplay:
* Fog of War
* Random placement
* No choice on how many armies to attack with
* MANY different boards
* Bombardment
* MANY different bonus types
* Team games
* Team deployment and fortification
* Medals
* Scoreboard
Sure there are similarities, but I like to think that this site has evolved and become something vastly different to Risk. I certainly did not get anything like the gaming experience with Risk as I do here. Risk is a social tabletop game, CC is a broad community-based game. And in summation, to quote from Deadwood... "Those who doubt me, suck cock by choice"
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Ditocoaf wrote:SlayerQC wrote:Btw, electronic arts will do the license version of scrabble on facebook now.
It's not the Classic Map that's the problem... it's the gameplay itself.
Bruceswar wrote:Ditocoaf wrote:SlayerQC wrote:Btw, electronic arts will do the license version of scrabble on facebook now.
It's not the Classic Map that's the problem... it's the gameplay itself.
Then any dice based game would have the same problem.... Eh.. I think not. I Know many dice based games where you use some sorta cards and are bonuses, but are nothing like risk. Are those bad as well?
Ditocoaf wrote:You own spaces, you have armies on those spaces, you attack spaces owned by other players, you roll (your armies-1 up to 3) dice while attacking, you roll (your armies up to 2) while defending, if you have the higher roll the other space loses armies, if you eliminate all armies from a space you capture it and move armies from your space onto it, etc, etc.
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