I sure hope that they're suing over a specific way to control with the touchscreen. 'Cause if they're not, they're getting no sympathy from me.
Please help out our The History Of Video Games page.That is stupid And Sega had been doing rather well before doing something stupid again
...What.
SEGA suing Level-5 over touchscreen controls is like Apple suing anyone for making their tablets with fingertip-sized icons. This is absolutely ridiculous.
Just... goddamnit. If my head had a crumple zone, I'd look like Betty White without her makeup.
Forgive the comparisons and such, I've been watching Whose Line Is It Anyway.
edited 11th Dec '12 5:36:59 AM by MrMallard
That's...got to be one very special way of using the touchscreen.
Join us in our quest to play all RPG video games! Moving on to disc 2 of Grandia!SEGA wtf. First the shining thing and now this? Wait is this Sega of Japan specifically?
@Vertigo: I asked someone about Sega thing and I got this posted to me .-. Do you have more info about that whether its done by sega or not as that article implies it might not even be sega since it'd be weird
Having played the Inazuma Eleven games, I can safely say there is no special way of using the touchscreen. The commands are:
- Tap: Like clicking in a PC RTS.
- Put your stylus down on a character, and drag to tell them where to go: Like drag and drop in a PC RTS.
- Put your stylus down anywhere on the overworld and drag in a direction to move in that direction.
And according to another article, Sega has been in talks with Level-5 since October 2011.
Extra 1: Poochy Ain't StupidThe other thing is that all of those exist in first or second party Nintendo games. Magical Starsign for one, Dragon Quest IX for another. Sega would have to sue pretty much anyone who developed for the DS or 3DS, including the people who made it, as well as the people who designed the Palm Pilot for this to have any credibility.
Not Three Laws compliant.Between this and the youtube fiasco, Sega has really lost a lot of respect from me.
Did they get new legal consultants or some shit?
So its confirmed that youtube thing WAS caused by sega? .-.
youtube thing?
...it doesnt have anything to do with this horrendous new layout does it?
cuz im just about ready to kill someone over that...
Check that article I posted, it details it and it also wonders if it was just some troll posing as Sega.
Pressing the "A button" to cause your character to "Jump" is a copyrighted procedure first used by...
... Using the "Analog stick" peripheral to "Move" an on-screen avatar in directions corresponding to...
... Camera controls being capable of movement are exclusively the right to use of...
No the youtube thing was sega forcing the removal of several videos on youtube.
oh is that all?
nothing noteworthy then.
-wonders who just posted and why their post is mysteriously blank-
-le gasp-
could it be?
it is!
the mysterious troll post?!
*shakes fist*
11 million dollars? SEGA must be hoping that these guys cave in and accept a settlement because legal costs will easily overcome any net gain they might achieve very quickly.
Politics is the skilled use of blunt objects.- Citation needed
Well, for example they managed to do Sonic games that weren't considered to be universally sucky Thats kind of impressive considering that how many sucky Sonic games there have been
Sonic Unleashed, Sonic Colors, Sonic Generations, Sonic 4 episode 2, Sonic adventure 2 battle for PC......
http://steamcommunity.com/id/Xan-Xan/Found two sites which show us what the patent is. I'm having trouble understanding the legal and technical jargon in Japanese, but sure enough, one of the elements Sega seems to be trying to lay claim to is friggin' drag and drop. The concept of dragging a character to tell them where to go is also in there.
It looks like Sega is suing because the in-battle stylus controls in Inazuma Eleven resemble the arcade touchscreen controls on Sega's World Club Champion Football - and the controls are quite similar, but I cannot possibly imagine how one could make a game like Inazuma Eleven with a control scheme that isn't similar. This is even more ridiculous than Apple's supposed patent on rectangles with rounded corners.
I'm starting to think Sega is just plain suicidal at this point - even if they somehow win this lawsuit, I think the PR disaster and Internet Backlash they'd suffer would cost them well over $11 million. Meanwhile, Inazuma Eleven 3 alone had about $30 million in sales on release week. The series practically prints money at this point, which means I doubt Level-5 will cave since they have the resources to fight it.
EDIT: And Sega's PR disaster has already begun. Twitter has exploded in Japan with the news. A search for "Sega" in Japanese turns up nothing but tweets on this lawsuit, most of which either express no opinion or are anti-Sega.
edited 11th Dec '12 11:28:40 AM by PoochyEXE
Extra 1: Poochy Ain't Stupid
Guess why.
........(Head Desk)
Watch Symphogear