The rights to Ms. Pac-Man are caught up in a messy legal battle
"The complicated rights situation behind Ms. Pac-Man is at the heart of a legal battle between Bandai Namco—which owns the Ms. Pac-Man trademark and copyright—and retro hardware maker AtGames—which has now purchased the separately held royalty rights to the game.The strange situation dates back to 1982, when a group of MIT students created an unauthorized "enhancement kit" named "Crazy Otto" for Bandai Namco's arcade hit Pac-Man. The MIT group, which organized under the name General Computer Corporation, then reached out to US Pac-Man distributor Bally Midway to develop that modification into the officially licensed Ms. Pac-Man.
As part of the Crazy Otto licensing deal, GCC received the right to a perpetual royalty payment whenever a Ms. Pac-Man game was sold. Bally Midway retained the copyright and trademark rights to the game and its characters, though, which Bandai Namco eventually reacquired in the intervening years. "
/proxy.php?image=https://cdn.arstechnica.net/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/mspacmanmini-760x380.jpg&hash=f4aafff7a6ec186ba01786192263dd15&return_error=1 The rights to Ms. Pac-Man are caught up in a messy legal battle AtGames allegedly misrepresented itself in negotiations with original developers. /proxy.php?image=https://cdn.arstechnica.net/favicon.ico&hash=1dc30f5753ce06abe7860f74913aa905&return_error=1 arstechnica.com
Pages:
[1]