The makers of a Chinese Hearthstone clone have come out to the public to ārefudiateā reports that they had been sentenced to pay Blizzard over $1.6 million.
Tencent News reports that Unico Interactive, the makers of āCrouching Dragon Legends,ā has been ordered to pay Blizzard and its Chinese partner NetEase for copyright violations. Apparently, Unico was ordered to pay Blizzard and company 10,000,000 RMB ($1,633,960.20).
Unico says that it hasnāt received any documentation from the Shanghai First Middle Court regarding compensation to Blizzard and NetEase. The company said that it was unhappy with the press reporting āfalse storiesā and that it is working with lawyers to see if there is any action to be taken.
The last part of Unicoās statement says that the company respects intellectual rights and that its only goal is to serve players. Unico said that it will continue to expand and create new games for its fans.
Unicoās statements come after reports that the company lost its battle against Blizzard and NetEase.
(The top logo is Hearthstone in Chinese, the second is āCrouching Dragon Legends.ā Spot the difference?)
Back in January, Blizzard and NetEase filed a copyright violation lawsuit against Unico for infringing on Hearthstone. Blizzard won the legal battle last Friday
The companyās game has been taken off various app stores, including Appleās App Store. The game and its servers have been put on hold since February, and in a statement on its website, Unico says that it will reimburse playersā earnings and real-world cash with items and in-game currency in future games.
A cursory look at Unicoās game shows that it is pretty much Hearthstone, but with a Romance of The Three Kingdoms theme. Players who have played āCrouching Dragonā comment that the game is pretty much the same as Hearthstone, with cards just being re-themed, say a paladin being re-skinned into Liu Bu.
Gameplay is also stated to be the same, with the same timed fast-paced card slinging as the original. The one key point of difference is perhaps the addition of a campaign mode.
No word on when the Chinese courts will announce an order or an award to Blizzard over the copyright violations.
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Eric is a Beijing based writer and all around FAT man. You can contact him @[emailĀ protected] or follow him on Twitter @FatAsianTechie