The Most Controversial Video Game Lawsuits

From
Revision as of 12:27, 10 April 2026 by JudeCoulston36 (talk | contribs)
Jump to: navigation, search


The legal battle between Epic Games and Too Human developer Silicon Knights was long and complex. Initially, Silicon Knights took Epic to court over the licensing of Unreal Engine 3, with the developer claiming that Epic was in breach of contract by withholding information about the engine itself, leading to the studio needing to build its own engine. However, before too long the tables were turned, and a countersuit led the courts to discover that Silicon Knights' own engine was using thousands of lines of code from the Unreal Eng


One pitfall that PUBG will need to watch out for is not to become too niche or difficult for players to get into. At the moment the sheer potential and power of PUBG is enough to keep new players coming and old players sticking around, FPS attachments|https://Fpspedia.com/ but that's not going to last forever. Eventually, players will drop off as they are enticed by new games that hit the market. That doesn't mean purely direct competitors to PUBG , but games across the board - some of those highly anticipated games of 2018 will take PUBG players away regardless of whether they offer similar gameplay at


Pitting four surivors with a sense of humor against an army of the undead made Zombieland a hit, but one video game series was using zombies for fun, not fear long before. The zombie shooter Left 4 Dead followed the same formula, even shaping its campaign and marketing to resemble a Hollywood film, but fans soon turned the game into an online sensation, where hilarious kills were the top priority. Zombieland kept the sense of humor and tension, and even "Kills of the Week" competitions intact, not to mention a finale set in a zombie-filled amusement park - a location included in Left 4 Dead 2 , released shortly after the mo


Despite claims that H1Z1 was dead and the depressing, massive drop in player activity that can be seen on Steam Charts , Daybreak remains confident and dedicated to their battle royale title. It launched out of early access finally two weeks ago and brought with it a surprise brand new mode called **Auto Royale ** which "puts the pedal to the metal within the standard battle royale conce


Ultimately, the film's greatest asset, the real life Navy SEALs (and their insight), create a strange mix of successes and failures that at times enhance the experience and on other occasions don't translate very well from reality to film. Much like the acting, there are moments where the filmmakers overindulged in reality and undermined immersion - offering a few flat-out all too "convenient" moments that probably have occurred on the battlefield (one involving a close-range RPG, especially), but come across as emotionally manipulative when viewed as part of a manufactured film project. Similarly, while the film's thin video game-esque storyline plays out like a mission logbook, and showcases the various aspects of military ops, it never bothers to develop the characters beyond anything but basic stereotypes - meaning that even though the story is on the surface realistic, there's very little for certain portions of the audience to connect with in the moment or ponder once the credits r


No game series has taken as much heat as Grand Theft Auto , embracing violence, destruction, and general carnage in the name of fun. The movie Crank took that dedication to heart – literally – with a hero who needs to keep his adrenaline pumping just to stay alive. The directors made the similarities to chaotic gaming obvious, including nods to video games throughout the movie, and even going completely into the digital world in the film’s final credits, putting star Jason Statham exactly where his character belongs: a bullet-fueled 16-bit shoo


As video game releases continue to bring in millions, or billions of dollars for major publishers, movie studios are turning to video game movies as their next big thing. But the ties between movies and games have existed longer than most fans, or executives, probably real


In an age when Call of Duty games can generate over $1 billion in sales in less than one month, it's safe to say that military combat simulation represents big business. However, while plenty of video games and Hollywood films have attempted to communicate the horrors of the battlefield, very few fiction projects have ever gone quite so far as **Act of Valor ** , the film by co-directors, Mike McCoy and Scott Wa

So what do you think of our list? Did we miss any of your favorite films that have video games to thank for their story, characters, or action? Let us know in our comment section and don't forget to subscribe to our YouTube channel for more videos like this


A Halo movie is still just a dream, but when Peter Jackson was producing the film back in 2006, he saw Neill Blomkamp as the perfect director for the project, who turned heads by mixing CG creatures with lo-fi camerawork and realistic sets instead of massive green screen spectacle. When the movie plans were scrapped, Jackson decided to produce Blomkamp’s District 9 instead, featuring alien creatures, conflicts, weapons and action scenes torn right out of a first person shooter. The movie was based on one of the director’s short film, but Blomkamp’s original goal and similarities have led many to claim that District 9 is as close a vision of Blomkamp’s Halo movie as fans will ever