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Classic Games (Games)

Former 'Donkey Kong' Record Holder Billy Mitchell May Now Sue Twin Galaxies (gamespot.com) 77

"Billy Mitchell always has a plan," said Billy Mitchell in the 2007 documentary about Donkey Kong high scores, The King of Kong.

And he tweeted the phrase again Wednesday. GameSpot explains why. "Billy Mitchell, the professional gamer and hot sauce purveyor who rose to fame for setting several retro video game high scores, is preparing for a return to court." As reported by Axios, the U.S. appeals court gave Mitchell permission to proceed with his defamation suit against Twin Galaxies, the online video game leaderboard website. In case you missed the legal tussle, the whole saga began when Twin Galaxies and Guinness World Records stripped Mitchell of his several of world records for Pac-Man and Donkey Kong after he was accused of using emulation devices to earn his scores instead of authentic arcade machines, as was required for these world record attempts. While Guinness would later reverse its decision, Twin Galaxies has so far refused to reinstate Mitchell's records.

Mitchell would file a defamation suit against Twin Galaxies in 2019, while the site itself fought back with an "anti-strategic lawsuit against public participation" — more commonly known as a SLAPP motion — response, a legal move designed to have frivolous lawsuits dismissed from court and prevent parties from being silenced, as spotted by Kotaku. This week's ruling by the State of California's Second court has stated that Mitchell and his legal team have enough material to continue the lawsuit.

Whether Mitchell and his team actually stand a chance of winning the case is another matter entirely...

Mitchell also tweeted the exact wording of the court's decision, starting with the words "Because Mitchell showed a probability of prevailing on his claims, the trial court properly denied the anti-SLAPP motion."
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Former 'Donkey Kong' Record Holder Billy Mitchell May Now Sue Twin Galaxies

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  • by Chas ( 5144 )

    Frivolous as it seems to me, I'm sure he incurs some form of fame/enrichment from this.
    Though not sure what.

    • "Remember me? I used to be somebody..." - Billy Mitchell
      • "Remember me? I used to be somebody..." - Billy Mitchell

        No, no you weren't and, if some old video game scores are the most important things to have happened in your life, you need to seriously reconsider your life choices. Though, this lawsuit proves your beyond such hope, so carry on while the rest of the world goes right on ignoring you for the triviality you are.

  • Guinness World Records out of court settlement so that says that billy Mitchell may have an good case for an jury / judge.

    • by UnknowingFool ( 672806 ) on Saturday October 16, 2021 @03:37PM (#61898677)
      No, it does not. A settlement with one party does not indicate success of a suit of another party.
    • by Moryath ( 553296 )
      He's already failed at his lawsuit [youtube.com]. Trying to refile is just going to get Billy "Cheating Ass" Mitchell laughed out of court.
      • by Moryath ( 553296 )
        Oh wow. Billy's farming modpoints to downmod facts and linked sources apparently! A bit desperate to change the tide of the conversation?
    • Aside from what the others have said (settlements do not set precedent), there was no settlement. AFAICT, there never was any suit against Guinness, they simply decided there wasn't enough evidence to rescind the record, so they reinstated it. It wasn't even that they found the gameplay was legitimate, just that there wasn't strong enough evidence it wasn't legitimate to change the record.

      • And, more to the point, they really don't care. Why? Guinness makes money by selling books on 'records' for entertainment purposes only. Unless there is glaering fraud that would make them look bad to accept, they could care less. They really will not spend time or money verifying a claim about fraudulent records unless nation-state actors are involved.

        • by Moryath ( 553296 )
          Guinness rescinded because they didn't want to spend the money playing laswuit-defense wack-a-mole fighting an obviously litigious bully through appeal after appeal after appeal over a videogame score, especially after Mitchell signaled he is willing to go broke filing in multiple courts across the USA as well as internationally (since Guinness is headquartered in Ireland). They already don't give a crap about real legitimacy of any 'records' in their book, and haven't for decades - they make their money of
  • by stephanruby ( 542433 ) on Saturday October 16, 2021 @03:00PM (#61898579)

    If you can emulate the game, then it means you can slow it down as much as you want by slowing down the clock speed.

    And if you have 2 days to make a decision for your pac man instead of 200 milliseconds, then yes, that's what I would call an unfair advantage.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Saturday October 16, 2021 @04:09PM (#61898753) Homepage Journal

      Mitchell has demonstrated his skills on certified unmodified arcade hardware, exceeding his original record score. So I don't think he needed to cheat.

      That said, the video of his original record is definitely on an emulator. I have no doubt of that, the evidence is undeniable. He may have known and cheated by using save states etc, he may not have. Either way the rules are clear, no emulators.

      If he genuinely didn't know then it's a bit harsh to ban him for life and cancel all his records. I've been playing arcade machines at shows, games I know inside and out, and not realised that there was a PC inside and not an original arcade PCB.

      • by ac22 ( 7754550 )

        Were there a lot of arcade cabinets running MAME in 2005 when Mitchell set his Donkey Kong record?

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          I think so. As I recall there were some specific ATI graphics cards that could output a 15kHz signal, and some WinMAME front ends designed for cabinet use. There was a lot of stuff on forums about editing ini files to create custom video modes with odd refresh rates to match certain games, like PacMan was 57.5Hz.

          You could buy adapters that let you connect the arcade joysticks as PS2 keyboards.

          • by ac22 ( 7754550 )

            Sure, technically it could be done, but in 2005 it was far cheaper and simpler to buy an original machine. 60,000 Donkey Kong cabinets were sold in the US.

            Also, according to this Youtube analysis at 19:20, allegedly Billy Mitchell released a video of him/his friend swapping the Donkey Kong board that he'd just set the record on for a Donkey Kong Junior board, for his next record attempt. That doesn't square with the theory that he might have accidentally set his record on a MAME emulator.

            https://www.youtube [youtube.com]

            • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Saturday October 16, 2021 @06:20PM (#61898975) Homepage Journal

              The video he submitted to Twin Galaxies with the record score is definitely MAME. The way the screen is drawn in MAME is different to the arcade hardware, because MAME uses a double buffered display and the real hardware renders into a single buffer as the beam is displaying it.

              The result is that on real hardware you see parts of the background for a fraction of a frame as the beam overtakes the CPU drawing it. In MAME the buffers are swapped during vblank so you never get that effect.

              There is no doubt that the record video is of MAME.

            • However there IS very clear evidence that it was emulated by the display of a bug known to only exist in versions of MAME until very recently, involving the display order of the girders when a stage begins.

              In fact, this situation is what brought the bug to the attention of MAMEdev; it's been subsequently fixed.

      • by mysidia ( 191772 )

        has demonstrated his skills on certified unmodified arcade hardware, exceeding his original record score. So I don't think he needed to cheat.

        Demonstrated later... doesn't mean the original record was legit at the time it was first claimed.

        I guess Twin Galaxies' mistake is publishing an official statement that can be considered "defamation" - Instead, they should have just stricken him from the record with no official explanation about Mitchell's conduct, and limited the official statement to something l

      • by Moryath ( 553296 )

        So I don't think he needed to cheat.

        Doesn't matter if he "needed to" cheat. The facts and overwhelming evidence are he cheated. Maybe he decided he was rusty and no longer trusted his own skills. Maybe he had been cheating so long and getting away with it, he forgot the risks. Maybe he thought he'd never get caught - it took 36 years (from 1982 to 2018) to fully catch Todd Rogers, or at least 16 years to fully debunk him even after the 2002 revelation that his Barnstorming record had been fabricated (whi

    • by tragedy ( 27079 )

      If you can emulate the game, then it means you can slow it down as much as you want by slowing down the clock speed.

      You can also do things like create save points, rewind, etc.

    • by jabuzz ( 182671 )

      It would be perfectly possible to modify a genuine PacMan arcade machine to have a variable clock speed so you could slow it down

      • by Briareos ( 21163 )

        It would be perfectly possible to modify a genuine PacMan arcade machine to have a variable clock speed so you could slow it down

        Good luck filming the screen and yourself (of course moving and talking to match the slowed-down game), recording the sound and editing everything so it looks convincingly un-slowed-down, though...

      • Considering how tightly linked old games were to screen refresh rates, I doubt it. You'd have to slow down the CRT screen's refresh rate as well. Even if you managed to do that, the phosphors have a time-to saturation-value (how long the electron beam has to stay on it for it to reach maximum light emission) and a decay time (how long the phosphor keeps emitting light after the electron beam has moved on) which certainly can't be easily tweaked. Probably easier to write a CRT emulator these days!

  • Wasn't he the first person to sink a battleship by dropping bombs on it?

    They named the B25 bomber after him.

  • by davidwr ( 791652 ) on Saturday October 16, 2021 @03:31PM (#61898665) Homepage Journal

    If Twin Galaxies loses, they may choose to just drop specific games from their record-books.

    After all, they are not under any obligation to maintain records on games where they cannot be confident that all players are playing the same game.

    For that matter, they are not obliged to maintain records on any particular game. If they decide to de-list games that involve a damsel in distress because they are "sexist" (sarcasm) or because the player's character is constantly eating pills because such games "encourage drug use" (more sarcasm), that's their prerogative.

    • They can't lose. Mitchell would have to prove that they knew he didn't cheat, but accused him anyway out of malice.

      He can't even prove that he didn't cheat. He can only dispute the accusation by providing witnesses.

      If, for example, he didn't cheat but Twin Galaxies believes he did, then he loses. Twin Galaxies wins. Even if he can prove 100% that he didn't cheat, he loses. He has to prove that Twin Galaxies knew he didn't cheat when they said whatever it was that he says defamed him, in addition to proving

    • Karl Jobst's video [youtube.com] does a better job of exposing this wanker.

      Last year Twin Galaxies sued him for $3,333,360 -- the same amount as the maximum score possible in Pac-Man. :-)

  • This part keeps being repeated with no original link: "As reported by Axios, the U.S. appeals court gave Mitchell permission to proceed with his defamation suit against Twin Galaxies". I cannot find the original article. What does "permission to proceed" merely mean? Does that mean the Court of Appeals acknowledged his filing. That does not mean the Court will even hear his case; they may turn it down without comment. Is it on the docket and which Court of Appeals?

    From what I remember, Mitchell has not ha

    • Axios's Stephen Totilo apparently just mentioned it in his newsletter. (Although he then also tweeted out a screenshot from that newsletter with the information [twitter.com]...)


      "Fun fact: The day after my wedding, I awoke to a call from a number I didn't recognize. Figured it was a family member who was lost or something. Nope. It was Billy Mitchell to chat more about an interview we'd done. "
    • It very much means that the court will hear his case, it's an appeal over the anti-SLAPP motion that Twin Galaxies filed to dismiss the case. The court of appeals was "State of California’s Second Appellate".
    • That almost sounds like someone who wants to keep the dispute in the news for self-promotion purposes and not actually concerned about winning or losing a case.

  • ..or is anyone else starting to hold a real dislike for this guy?
    • Maybe we can heckle him at Funspot.

    • Nobody has liked this guy for years, except maybe that other cretin, Todd Rogers.

    • He is far less harmful and annoying than many of the people who keep re-emerging in the spotlight.

      What I think is going on here is a case of OCD, and that disorder has the ability to destroy lives. I'm seriously concerned about this guy's mental health as it seems OCD is what continues to drive him to continue persuing this whole Donkey Kong bruhaha. By now most people would've just muttered a few curse words and moved on.

      I have OCD, and I had it all my life. I wouldn't wish it on my worst

    • He wants to be remembered as the sole high-score holder of all time for Donkey Kong, but increasingly, he is being remembered as the kid who kept saying "ya-huh" when everyone else said "nuh-uh".
  • I think if the rules state consoles only, no emulator, then that's pretty straight forward and Mitchell has no case. He sounds like the High School football quarterback that threw the winning pass at the homecoming game that one time in his Senior year, and has based his entire useless life on that one event, reliving and bragging about it every time he gets drunk, for the past 40 years -- or at least wants to be that dude, but the rules keep him from being him.
    • I think if the rules state consoles only, no emulator, then that's pretty straight forward and Mitchell has no case. He sounds like the High School football quarterback that threw the winning pass at the homecoming game that one time in his Senior year, and has based his entire useless life on that one event, reliving and bragging about it every time he gets drunk, for the past 40 years -- or at least wants to be that dude, but the rules keep him from being him.

      It was four touchdowns in one game [youtube.com], you cretin.

    • I'm pretty sure he has no case, but defamation itself isn't about obeying the rules, it is about defamation of him. I don't know what exactly he's asserting Twin Galaxies did to defame him. If it was merely stripping him of the reward, then yeah, he's got nothing. If, on the other other Twin Galaxies made other assertions, that could well get them in hot water, but from my limited understanding of the case, I think it is just the removal of the record.
      • I think the defamation comes from what Twin Galaxies claimed in court: "Twin Galaxies filed a counterclaim against Mitchell and Walter Day in late 2020, alleging that they conspired to modify the games and that Mitchell lacked the necessary skill to achieve the scores, as well as accusing them of financial misconduct."
  • "Billy Mitchell always has a plan," said Mitchel [...]

    He's not the only one:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

  • I'm still unable to buy his hot sauce. Did he give up on that front?

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