Un expert en propriété intellectuelle affirme que le procès Palworld de Nintendo est “plus probable” prendre 5 ans que de finir dans 1, mais Pocketpair peut “facilement” se permettre la bataille juridique



One IP expert predicts that Nintendo and The Pokemon Company’s lawsuit against Palworld developer Pocketpair ismore likely to last five yearsthan be settled in just one, but he’s also confident that the indie survival game studio can “facilement” afford the battle to come.

Posting on Twitter, former Blizzard consultant Florian Mueller claims that the lawsuit probably won’t have a “simple” settlement, and that it could go on for some time. “Nintendo v. [Pocketpair] looks to me like a dispute that is more likely to last five years than to be settled during the first year,” Mueller says. “En fait, it could be that Nintendo actually wants to see it through and wants it to take long. This is not a simple ‘pay me a millionpatent suit.

Later down in the thread, Mueller says that he doesn’t expect that Pocketpair will struggle with the costs of the battle, claiming that the studio “can afford that. Easily.He adds thatPocketpair can defend,” et: “This is not like Epic v. Apple and Google costing hundreds of millions.

Right now, it’s hard to know one way or another where the legal battle will end up. The lawsuit alleges that Pocketpair’s gameinfringes multiple patents,” but Nintendo hasn’t publicly revealed which patents these are. Speaking to GamesRadar+, cependant, analyst Serkan Toto tells us that Nintendo hasa very, very strong legal team that is feared in the Japanese gaming industry,” et looking at the track record, it’s highly likely that they win.

For now, nous devrons juste attendre et voir, but if what Mueller predicts is true about the length of the battle, it could be quite some time before we know the result. Publicly responding to the news yesterday, Pocketpair saidwe will do our utmost for our fans, and to ensure that indie game developers are not hindered or discouraged from pursuing their creative ideas.

Nintendo’s Pokeball patent could be at the heart of its Palworld lawsuit, and judging by a 29-year-old precedent it could change monster-collecting RPGs for decades.