China loves Gundam. But China doesnāt always love copyright law. That can be a problem!
Bandai Namco, owner of the Gundam toy license, took Chinaās Hongli All Toys to court in 2009 for knocking off the famed Japanese mechs. Even before the lawsuitās final ruling, Gundam clones continued to pop up in the Mainland.
Copyright enforcement in China is increasing. A natural result of economic explosion, the expansion of intellectual property rights isnāt only to protect foreign companies like Bandai Namco in China, but also domestic companies as well.
Old habits die hard. In China, a blind eye was turned to knock-offs for years. But increasingly, thatās changing. Japanese companies are also guilty of knock-offsājust look at all the Monster Hunter and Professor Layton clonesābut due to a strict legal system, they need to be slightly less obvious.
https://lastchance.cc/can-you-spot-monster-hunter-30892989%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
Whether itās the iPed or the orange Gundam, the Japanese media takes delight in catching Chinaās copyright transgressions as siblings would tattle on each other.
https://lastchance.cc/china-rips-off-the-ipad-with-the-iped-5549865%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
Late last year, Chinese theme park Floraland Park erected an orange-colored mech that looked like Gundam. The Floraland figure sported logos that read EFSF and WB on its shoulders, which are abbreviations for Gundamās āEarth Federation Space Forceā and the animeās mothership āWhite Baseā.
https://lastchance.cc/orange-you-glad-china-has-a-giant-mecha-5710035%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
The theme park denied there were similarities, saying their giant mech was original. The statue disappeared, and then later reappeared with new spiky shoulder and shin pads. Japan, for the most part, appeared amused with the lengths their neighbor went to disguise the knock-off, leading to a flurry of fan art (see gallery, courtesy of ćÆć”ć¾čµ·ēØæ).
https://lastchance.cc/a-giant-denial-for-gundam-rip-off-claim-5715121%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
Hongli All Toys didnāt create toys based on the Floraland āChinese Gundamā, thought it shouldāve, because that wouldāve been awesome, but according to Bandai Namcoās suit, Mobile Suit Gundam and the SD Gundam Sangokuden: Brave Battle Warriors. Hongliās mech toys do look quite similar to the SD Gundam Sangokudenāitās not just but a Chinese court who ruled in Bandaiās favor. Hongli appealed, but the court ruled in Bandaiās favor.
Besides being forced to pay the equivalent of USD$120,000 in legal fees and ceasing the sale and manufacture of its Gundam knock-offs, Hongli was ordered to write an apology in Business China, reports Japanās Inside Games. The apology was published on May 13. As of posting, Hongliās website still has pictures of the toys online, along with its own copyright notice.
For all the differences and tension, Gundam does bring Japan and China together. This court ruling helps ensure that itās Gundam thatās doing the bridge building and not, you know, Gunzam or whatever.
https://lastchance.cc/giant-mechas-make-the-world-a-better-place-5702920%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
Culture Smash is a daily dose of things topical, interesting and sometimes even awesomeāgame related and beyond.