Register, Others Call Plagiarism in "Limbo of the Lost" Game 400
Fallen Andy writes "'The Register' has an article describing 'Limbo of the Lost' (developed by Majestic and sold in the U.S by Tri Synergy) which seems to have 'borrowed' copiously graphics assets from other games. Over at the GamesRadar forum there is a thread with some screenshots. Finally, this game has its own Wikipedia entry. Warning to all — move the soft drink away from the keyboard and monitor before you look at
those screenshots. Blatant this is, very blatant indeed."
I don't see what the big deal is (Score:5, Funny)
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They might loose someone's game purchasing dollars since we can get most of the game experience from just playing LotL.
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One cannot lose what one does not already own.
Re:I don't see what the big deal is (Score:5, Funny)
Hey, as long as you were getting philosphical...
Re:I don't see what the big deal is (Score:4, Interesting)
We can also take comfort in knowing that the companies from whom the graphics were lifted probably keep the lion's share of the profit from game sales and the graphic artists make almost nothing, by comparison.
Also, if the guy at 'Limbo of the Lost' bought the game it is his to do with what he wishes because he didn't agree to any stupid 'don't lift graphics' clause and shrinkwrap licenses have never been proven in court anyway so no one has any legal standing to complain about anything. This includes if he wants to make a mashup of the game's graphics and his own cool gaming idea and call it 'Limbo of the Lost'.
And furthermore copyright law has been subverted by corporate interests and is just a shadow of what the found fathers wanted it to be. Copyright is OUR rights not theirs it makes sure WE get the copyrightable content but it has been changed around to give CORPORATIONS all the control. Do I want DRM on my hard drive so I can play a game but keep me from taking screenshots? No! I'll never install Vista. If this was available in WINE I would play it but it isn't. I don't even run NDISWRAPPER!
So, in conclusion, no. I don't think anyone has stolen anything. Information wants to be free.
As in I don't pay anything for it.
Re:I don't see what the big deal is (Score:5, Interesting)
Guess what? The CORPORATIONS that own this stuff are composed of people and owned by people. You can become one of those people for about $50 a share. A corporation is the modern expression of the Right of Free Assembly, and is used to administer cooperative division-of-labor and ownership of property.
Would you prefer that property can only be owned whole, by single individuals? Do you realize that it would be impossible to undertake any large, capital-intensive project in that environment?
Re:I don't see what the big deal is (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I don't see what the big deal is (Score:5, Insightful)
Am I an evil corporate scumbag because I own a limited liability company? Am I magically less evil if I make the same games as a sole proprietor? Or is all commerce evil and only working for free in a hippy commune an acceptable way to live?
These guys were scum who took other peoples hard work and tried to profit from it. They should be sued to death. If you tolerate this, then that means you would prefer all modern games to just be re-mixes of the 8 bit textures from games of twenty years ago. After all, why the hell put any effort into creating original stuff when you can just rip off people who can do better work than you.
Re:I don't see what the big deal is (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't actually agree with the OP, but he's not advocating communism. He's railing against corporations, because they absolve people of all personal responsibility and liability. So, yes, he probably thinks you're a scumbag of sorts because you own a LLC. If you truly believe that you're not doing anything wrong, then you should have a sole proprietorship, and accept all the liability that goes along with that. If you're not doing anything wrong, why aren't you willing to risk your own personal fortune and home?
Personally, I disagree with this view partly. He makes a good point, in that people involved in corporations are too shielded from liability, so that, for instance, people like Ken Lay get to walk free after doing criminal things and just letting their corporation take the fall by collapsing, leaving all the actual people in charge without any consequences, but with plenty of money. However, if I were to start a business of my own, I would certainly form an LLC as well, because while big corporations like Enron and their executives certainly get off too easy, in today's overly-litigious society, it is simply too risky to allow your personal assets be tied up with your business, because one lawsuit gone bad (because of some stupid jury) means your home and other assets can be seized. While I personally don't believe myself to be doing any wrong, I simply don't trust the court system to render correct verdicts, and worse, it's simply too easy to be driven out of business by excessive litigation even if you're completely innocent due to our lack of "loser pays" laws, so it makes perfect sense to protect your assets by shielding yourself behind an LLC.
Re:I don't see what the big deal is (Score:4, Informative)
There are no protections to people who do things wrong because of a corporation.
Re:I don't see what the big deal is (Score:4, Informative)
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When you invest in a corporation, there is an assumption that the corporation will act ethically and with your best interests in mind. When a corporation does illegal things,
Re:I don't see what the big deal is (Score:4, Interesting)
What would happen to the stock market if the government started to go after corporate criminals with the same zeal it goes after minority street criminals?
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It isn't just a few bad apples, the barrel of corporate culture is almost pure rot, with very little apple at all.
And you know this how?
Remember, anything which makes the news is by definition an exceptional event. Things like Enron, skipping required safety inspections, false audits, etc. are the exception, not the rule.
Most corporations I interact with on a regular basis seem to be fine upstanding citizens. The grocery stores I visit do a good job at a fair price. My car is well made and, as far as I am aware, the workers well compensated. My electricity is reliably delivered at a low price in compliance with enviro
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No, crime is the rule. The only thing exceptional about them is that they got caught. Or do you think the news magically reports on things they don't know about?
Either there is evidence for it or there is not. If there is no evidence then you're just talking out your ass. If there is evidence but the news organizations are ignoring it or missing it then please present it.
Did you know that those fine upstanding grocery stores you visit also have outlets in poor neighborhoods? And they charge more, because poor people can't afford cars, so there is no competition.
What? Stores charge more money in areas that are more dangerous and more expensive to operate in? Say it isn't so!
They also 'accidentally' charge more than the marked price at the register, much more frequently in poor areas.
[[citation needed]]
So, do you think the workers who made your car are as well compensated as they were, say, in the US back in the 60s?
I couldn't say, but given that the median (not mean) inflation-adjusted wage has gone up around 50% since the 60s and the workers at the company who made my car a
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-1 Man Terrorizing Crows (Score:3, Funny)
Re:-1 Man Terrorizing Crows (Score:4, Insightful)
I don't know if the intention of his post was really to call "those people" hypocrites. If I had to define his point, I'd say that he is simply trying to show "those people" that the arguments they often use are, at best, questionable justifications that, in another context, seem rather ridiculous.
For example, you seem to be saying (and forgive me if I misinterpret) that in one context, we have a company making money off of another companies work, and that's wrong. But it's not so wrong for an individual to use or acquire a companies copyrighted assets without compensation because that individual won't profit from it. Never mind that said company could be losing profits because of it. Never mind that it doesn't belong to that individual, regardless of how insignificant they feel their actions are. I mean, where's the line, and what gives this individual the right to draw it? But there's no use in arguing, as the OP pointed out, there are a dozen or so ways for the individual to justify it to himself, and in the process trick himself into thinking he's some kind of freedom crusader, saving the world from the evil corporations that *gasp* want to charge us for things, even when most of us secretly know he/she just wants free stuff.
In the end, as an observer, I guess I've always just found the pirate's reasoning to be a little self-serving. It's always been so easy to call corporations evil, controlling bastards intent on ripping the public off. It's a lot more difficult to ask yourself what your personal responsibility is, what your true motivations are, and what your self-serving justifications say about you. Maybe there is something hypocritical about a thief that steals from thieves.
But I can't think about that now, I have definitions to look up.
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That almost nothing can amount to something:
Results of a 2007 survey indicate that the average salary for a game artist is USD $66,594 annually. The least experienced artists (with less than 3 years experience) generally earn about $43,657, while artists with over six years experience on average ear
Re:I don't see what the big deal is (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:I don't see what the big deal is (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I don't see what the big deal is (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:I don't see what the big deal is (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I don't see what the big deal is (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:I don't see what the big deal is (Score:5, Funny)
... and I call redundancy on that title. (Score:2)
To add insult to injury.
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From Wikipedia (Score:4, Informative)
The key word is "lost" (Score:3, Funny)
Re:From Wikipedia (Score:4, Informative)
Screenshots (Score:5, Informative)
If you steal from one or two it's plagiarism (Score:5, Funny)
Three or more, it's research.
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Three or more, it's research.
Re:If you steal from one or two it's plagiarism (Score:4, Funny)
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Man your spellchecker did a number on that one! Hackneyed.
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Really? I'd assumed he meant the game involved hacking people off at the knees. "We are the knights who say 'Nih'"...
Sad (Score:2)
I feel sorry for the people who worked hard on the game and had no idea someone was doing this.
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Re:Sad (Score:5, Informative)
They used an out-of-the-box-create-your-own-2.5D-adventure software and just imported in screenshots from other games. I don't think any of them know a lick about coding whatsoever.
It's amazing that these guys got published when some real independent shops with real talent can't get anything going.
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Re:Sad (Score:5, Informative)
These guys didn't have to worry about operating costs because they stole all their art assets and used a free-ware engine.
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Needless to say, the results were... ahem... interesting. After loading my saved game I decided to wait before trying it again.
It's currently available on Steam for anyone who missed it the first time, $20 well spent. (I forget what I paid for it... but it's given me years of entertainment, that's for sure.)
Re:Sad (Score:5, Informative)
I'm not saying the developers weren't in on it, I'm just saying the artists at my company could rip off the most famous games ever made and I probably wouldn't know about it.
Oblivion (Score:3, Funny)
Except much shittier... Oh... and YES, I quoted myself!
Wow, that is impressive (Score:2)
I do wonder if these are a few 'rare' points in the game, or a larger overall theme. Maybe some intern/rookie screwed up and copied too much when the boss said, "Make something like this"
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It isn't "borrowing"... (Score:5, Interesting)
For example, listen to the opening sequence of Queen's Under Pressure featuring David Bowie. Then, after having your stomach pumped as a precaution, the opening bits of Vanilla Ice's Ice, Ice Baby.
For the Google impaired, here is a YouTube link [youtube.com] doing a comparison.
Just equate Limbo of the Lost with Ice, Ice Baby and you will understand. Of course, that would mean Majestic Studios is really Vanilla Ice...
Re:It isn't "borrowing"... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:It isn't "borrowing"... (Score:5, Informative)
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First off.. Vanilla Ice did not sample. He changed the 8th note, so therefore it was "original".. This was not listed as "sampling"
Now, for someone who does sample, a lot, P Ditty (Puff Daddy, Sean Combs, Whatever).
He does sample a lot. But, he pays the copyright holder for the rights to sample that music.
Satirically speaking... (Score:4, Funny)
We can also take comfort in knowing that the companies from whom the graphics were lifted probably keep the lion's share of the profit from game sales and the graphic artists make almost nothing, by comparison.
Also, if the guy at 'Limbo of the Lost' bought the game it is his to do with what he wishes because he didn't agree to any stupid 'don't lift graphics' clause and shrinkwrap licenses have never been proven in court anyway so no one has any legal standing to complain about anything. This includes if he wants to make a mashup of the game's graphics and his own cool gaming idea and call it 'Limbo of the Lost'.
And furthermore copyright law has been subverted by corporate interests and is just a shadow of what the found fathers wanted it to be. Copyright is OUR rights not theirs it makes sure WE get the copyrightable content but it has been changed around to give CORPORATIONS all the control. Do I want DRM on my hard drive so I can play a game but keep me from taking screenshots? No! I'll never install Vista. If this was available in WINE I would play it but it isn't. I don't even run NDISWRAPPER!
So, in conclusion, no. I don't think anyone has stolen anything. Information wants to be free.
As in I don't pay anything for it.
(P.S. -- I'm adding some skulls to this comment)
Re:It isn't "borrowing"... (Score:4, Insightful)
I dont believe that is a sample. Samples are when you take the actual audio of one song and take a bit of it and use it in your song. In the case of Ice, Ice Baby the riff was ripped off and re recorded.
This is important because the labels own the recordings of the songs but the artists own the songs themselves. You have to pay the artist if you re-record their song, you don't have to pay the artist if you sample a recording.
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...it is sampling, just like in the music industry.
I would have to second this opinion. Given that the Backgrounds are evidentally static screenies, then I don't see a lot of difference between this, music mix CDs and/or video mashup.
Heck, I use the background images from Bejeweled as wallpaper. Does that make me an IP infringer? If I give the wallpaper to the guy in the next office am I then a pirate?
This is simple Fair use IMHO, although they should give credit to the sources.
Re:It isn't "borrowing"... (Score:4, Funny)
I hope you're happy.
The worst part is ... (Score:5, Funny)
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I'd love to know... (Score:2)
I simply can't comprehend the thoughts that must've gone through the developer's minds when they decided this was okay.
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"Got to get this room done by midnight or I'm fired."
Hard work, though... (Score:5, Insightful)
Holy Crap (Score:2)
The next step (Score:4, Funny)
Re:The next step (Score:4, Funny)
Excuse me, why does this itemized legal bill include a $600 listing for a cosmetic surgery clinic?
It's a legitimate business expense. Your case required a double dose of Botox.
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Doesn't mention (Score:2)
Instant legend (Score:2)
Re:Instant legend (Score:5, Funny)
Expert: I say, that's a jolly good thing, a shrink-wrapped copy of the infamous "Limbo of the Lost" game!
Owner: Why? Is it famous?
Expert: Well, you see, the creators of the game (and I use the term "creator" generously here) basically stolen static screen shots from a number of other games, and using a crappy adventure game generator, produced this wonder, which they actually managed to get published and distributed.
Owner: So how much is it worth?
Expert: A top-notch undamaged shrink wrapped copy like this would go at auction for at least three million dollars!
Owner: Wow! I mean wow wow wow!
Expert: Indeed...
Owner: So what about this shrink-wrapped copy of The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion?
Expert: I'll give you twelve bucks.
Limbo of the Lost Graphics (Score:5, Funny)
Interview with the designers (Score:5, Funny)
Epic
Bits from interview with the game creators (Score:5, Informative)
"The project is more influenced by film and literature rather than other games, we want the experience to be as original as possible and as such we have made a calculated effort to keep away from other games in the genre."
"All of the game (apart from initial background story and some character designs) had to be re-written, all the characters had to be created in 3D and animated, all the background scenes re-created, all the sounds, coding and music?..basically everything had to be redone or newly created for the PC version. This is not an old game that has been dressed up. This is the original concept, dusted off and re-created."
Also, the game has been in production for 10 years and rewritten few times. I think these guys deserve a "Hard core audacity" award...
Full Article [quandaryland.com]
So I guess... (Score:5, Funny)
Lol, nice games to lift from (Score:3, Funny)
Heh. Anyone know where I can get this game? (Score:2)
I can see how this could happen... (Score:5, Insightful)
The developers are of course stoked by the amazing art "developed" for their game, and give lots of bonuses. Then they discover that they've been sounded robbed, as their game (and their reputations) are soundly denounced.
I'm not saying this has happened in this case, but I've seen scenarios like this before (when I did work in the games industry).
I'm also not saying that this justifies it. If anything it reveals "technology blindness" where the developers are so in love with their own product that they don't bother looking at what else is on the market.
Re:I can see how this could happen... (Score:5, Informative)
What about the engine? (Score:5, Interesting)
http://209.85.141.104/search?q=cache:GTYHJgCqVCYJ:www.bluesnews.com/cgi-bin/board.pl%3Faction%3Dviewthread%26threadid%3D88482+%22Limbo+of+the+Lost%22+engine&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=1&gl=us [209.85.141.104]
That must have been a tremendous job just to write the different converters but then again I don't understand why Steve Bovis, was not able to code a simple CD check into the main menu???
"Wintermute Engine Development Kit is a set of tools for creating and running graphical âoepoint&clickâ adventure games, both traditional 2D ones and modern 2.5D games (3D characters on 2D backgrounds). The kit includes the runtime interpreter (Wintermute Engine, or WME) and GUI editors for managing and creating the game content (WME tools) as well as the documentation, demonstrational data and prefabricated templates." - http://dead-code.org/home/ [dead-code.org]
All the backgrounds they stole are screenshots from other games. They made a 3D character to move (with scaling) on 2D backgrounds.
Re:What about the engine? (Score:4, Interesting)
http://forum.dead-code.org/index.php?topic=2904.msg18305#msg18305 [dead-code.org]
http://forum.dead-code.org/index.php?topic=2746.msg17668#msg17668 [dead-code.org]
Re:What about the engine? (Score:4, Funny)
Hehe, I find it amusing that these people are hoping to "quit their day jobs" off this game but couldn't afford $3,000 for a decent computer to render the games they took screen shots of!
Limbo of the Lost Contest (Score:5, Funny)
Contest is over, but the entries are hilarious.
The Article rocks! (Score:3, Interesting)
All to often, articles simply list the name of the company in question, and the people actually behind the theft(I consider it theft) hide behind that, thus circumventing any real lasting public derision.
The article destroyed any credibility these idiots may have had in the gaming marketplace, and rightfully so. A simple Google search by potential employers/investors will be all it takes to bring up that article.
Back to McDonald's with you, fryboy!
Parodies (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.rockpapershotgun.com/?page_id=1909 [rockpapershotgun.com]
My favorite is the Zork one.
http://www.rockpapershotgun.com/images/june08/limbocompo/JohnLeonard.jpg [rockpapershotgun.com]
Who knew anyone would notice? (Score:3, Funny)
I mean, it's not as if any gamers would know such obscure titles as Diablo II or Oblivion or Unreal Tournament or anything...
I can just hear the designers now...
"We'd have gotten away with it, too... if it weren't for those darn kids!"
All they need to do.. (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Oblivion (Score:5, Informative)
Even if they hadn't plagiarized other games, I can't see anyone buying the piece of crap. Everything about it - plot, graphics, audio, game engine - reeks of amateurism.
Re:Oblivion (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Oblivion (Score:5, Funny)
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And some places HAVE claimed copyright of landmarks - the Eiffel Tower is one. That's a bit more dubious, though. However, pressing PrintScreen and adding
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nope, it is that bad (Score:3, Insightful)
It may be illegal anyway, since they used the images to make a product for resale without permission. If you plan to use an image from a game for commercial product you must, at the very least, cite your sources.
I have a number of game development books that rely heavily in in game shots from many current titles, and they are *all* cited correctly.
Even when you aren't sel
Re:Shakespeare was a Plagarist (Score:4, Insightful)
So, in which older tellings of something like Hamlet can you point to prose such as Shakespeare's "To be, or not to be..." passage? It's one thing to write a game with a magic ring quest plot, and it's quite another to say you're doing something original, and it's just a coincidence that you have characters named Frodo and Gandalf.
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"With a few exceptions, Shakespeare did not invent the plots of his plays. Sometimes he used old stories (Hamlet, Pericles). Sometimes he worked from the stories of comparatively recent Italian writers, such as Boccaccio - using both well-known stories (Romeo and Juliet, Much Ado About Nothing) and little known ones (Othello). Shakespeare has been proven, by many authors, to have borrowed from the Arts, the Histories and the Sciences."
I disagree that using the ideas surrounding a plot is plagiarism. There are only so many plot stories that can possibly exist: boy meets girl, good vs. evil, overcoming adversity, etc.
Shakespeare merely looked at history (which, arguably, has some of the best stories) and at other popular works and mimicked those works and plots.
Plagiarism, on the other hand, in my opinion, is an exact replica of someone's work without giving that person or people any credit for that work. So, just to illustrate my point
Re:Shakespeare was a Plagarist (Score:4, Insightful)
Ideas and stories are not copyrightable. It's the execution of the ideas and stories that are protected.
You can take the basic story of "King Lear" and create "Ran". You can take the basic story of "Seven Samurai" and create "The Magnificent Seven". Those pairs of movies share plots and stories but each executes its own vision.
In this case, the problem with the game is that they stole the execution - i.e. the art - used in other games, not the story.
Re:Shakespeare was a Plagarist (Score:5, Interesting)
better analogy (Score:3, Interesting)
Think about Space Invaders, Galaga and Galaxian - same gameplay, different sprites.
I don't think that's quite the right analogy though.
Think of this more like someone took a picture of the screen when you were playing Space Invaders, then used that image as a background for their RTS space domination game.
I think this case could really present itself to be a very interesting legal president. It sure looks like it could fall under fair use and derivative work. The game is vastly different than all of the games that the artwork was taken from. Which would move it into the derivative work d
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Realmyst [realmyst.com]