Since the negative reviews of the steam continue to pile, the drug dealer Simulator Publisher Movie Games SA has resolved the dispute around the DDS2 Steam page with a simple, straightforward message in the Indi Hit Schedule I: “There is no case.”
It’s been a few days for film sports: The company has confirmed yesterday that it is investigating Schedule I about the “potential violation” of its drug dealer Simulator IP, which includes sports plots, mechanics as well as (The UI). “It also states that no legal action was taken against the schedule, which was confirmed by Tyler, the creator of Schedule 1 of the TVGS, and is investigating it as part of its” legal responsibilities “.
It was a bit important that did not really come down with the gamers, who immediately criticized the drug dealer simulator and DDS2 with hundreds of negative reviews – in the case of the original, it is enough to drag it by “most positive” overall rating. Many of these negative studies have complained that the movie’s game is being sued for SA TVGs, though this is not happening right now.
Which brings us to today Refusal. This is a total film Games SA reiterates shared information, but with emphasis on a particular point:
“There is no case, ” Refresh, Boldface and all are in the title of the post and the image with it. “We do not intend to prevent TVG from selling or developing their games.
“The nature of the similarities between sports is being investigated because preliminary legal analysis indicates that it may be violated. Analyzes and investigations were necessary in the light of its opinion that the game was very similar. Failure to investigate it, the company could have to go to the movie, the results of the company.
The update also noted that information about the investigation was shared only by Poland EspiA stock market communications system “where we are obliged to publish such information of full transparency,” and that it was picked up by media outlets, and “in some cases it was misrepresented as legal action.”
There is no specific request to terminate the Steam Review Campaign, but the message is clearly controlled by the loss, which is very clear.
But it seems that it has the desired effect: The update responses here and there are some messages that acknowledged that the needs of publicly traded companies are at least proud, but the widespread desire to forgive and forget the massive response is not reflected.
I do not know the law of international publication (or the details of this specific matter) so that the real need for the investigation can be decided, and the time of the investigation seems to be a bit, okay, objectionable: There are dozens of drug dealer SIM games on steam, but only one of them stands on top of the steam. The most running chartExile 2, miracle rivals, and even before the Bongo cat.
In this light, it is not difficult to see why some people can imagine that the film sports SA is digging for a piece of action and has been caught, and now he is trying to clean it with regulatory responsibility claims. At the same time, there is no question that it is in accordance with the film sports: What happens in the future is not yet determined, but for now, there is no case. Unless the company confirms that there will be Never Be a legal action, though, I suspect it doesn’t matter.