There have been reports of Chinese developers ripping off browser games or smartphone games. Nothing new! This, however, is slightly different. Developer Dominic Szablewski says the game engine he developed (and sells) is being copied and sold in China.
The engine Szablewski created is Impactâitâs a JavaScript Game Engine designed to create HTML games. The copied site is Kilofoxâit looks exactly the same, but obviously, in Chinese.
Szablewski tells website Tech In Asia that he first noticed that someone in China was copying his engine earlier this summer. He tried to contact the individual who was apparently copying his engine, but got no response. Then, Szablewski tried emailing Kilofoxâs US-based hoster, Softlayer, but likewise, he apparently got no reply.
After registering an account on Kilofox âto look at the site a bit closerâ, Szablewski says that his siteâthe legit siteâsuffered a DOS attack.
Tech in Asia reached out to the individual who registered Kilofox (a man named Long Yang who either lives in Harbin or, perhaps, Beijing). To Tech in Asiaâs interview request, Long responded: âThe website [kilofox.net] is mine, but the product is not mine. I donât think an interview is necessary.â
Kilofox, it seems, is priced half of what Impact is, and it has zero after-sales support. Obviously, Szablewski says he doesnât see a penny of the Kilofox sales. According to the developer:
The bottom line is: I donât know how many sales I lost. Prior to all this, I sold about 3-6 licenses per month to Chinese customers. This has gone down to about 2 licenses per month, while sales for all other countries have gone up. With numbers this low, itâs hard to say if itâs a fluke or really a consequence of the Chinese clone.
Since kilofox.net went online, I received numerous emails from Chinese customers who were confused whether the site was legitimate. After I told them it was not, they expressed how disappointed and embarrassed they were that someone from their country stole my product.
For Szablewski, itâs not just that his intellectual property seems to be at stake, but the reputation of the game engine in Chinaâespecially as heâs unable to offer support and updates.
âI had some very happy customers from China and I would love to continue selling it in China,â told Tech in Asia, âbut honestly, stuff like that makes it hard for me to see China as a viable country to do business in.â
Chinese âDeveloperâ Steals Game Engine, Sells it For Half Price
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