Tim Langdellâs not really a developer â âlitigatorâ might be a better job description â but the Lord of Edge is really on the IGDA board. Now someoneâs started a petition to remove him.
This is a little more meaningful than your average ranting internet petition. It was begun by International Game Developers Association member Michael Lubker, and is only taking signatures from IGDA members. Lubker, like many others, is repulsed by Langdellâs campaign of harassment against anyone who produces a game â something Langdell has not done in 15 years â whose title or branding somehow invokes the unique word he trademarked, which is âEdge.â
https://lastchance.cc/trademark-troll-gets-mobigames-edge-taken-down-5273141%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
Weâve chronicled his shenanigans before, as recently as this past weekend. These arenât isolated incidents, folks. Just now heâs gotten Mobigamesâ Edge, which brought this mess back into the public consciousness in May, re-yanked from the iTunes App store. Moreover, Langdell has alleged that Edge is somehow an infringement on his own game of 1986, something called Bobby Bearing, which is itself a ripoff of Marble Madness.
http://lastchance.cc/5312534/trademark-troll-is-at-it-again%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
Back to the IGDA: In his argument, Corvus cites the relevant portion of the bylaws in his argument for Langdellâs removal. Basically, they need 10 percent of the membership to demand a vote on the removal of Langdell from the board of directors. Iâve gotten word that this movement was afoot already, but the anti-Langdell side was having difficulty getting a membership mailing list from the IGDA. Iâm not sure what the leadershipâs posture would be toward a petition hosted on a third-party site, whose only means of verification is a self-entered membership number.
But if anything, it continues to force the issue on Langdellâs obnoxious behavior and the embarrassing association the IGDA has with this man. More than a few others have told me no one really paid any attention to the voting on the board membership in the past; if nothing else, maybe people will now.
Update: From Cult of Macâs Craig Grannell comes word that Mobigamesâ Papazian has talked with Bobby Bearingâs actual developers, Robert and Trevor Figgins, and they claim they retain the rights to the game. Langdell, they assert, was just the publisher. Further, those two are said to believe that Mobigamesâ Edge is not a game similar to Bobby Bearing. If this is true, it makes Langdellâs claim even more despicable, although we are talking about a contract they had (if any) more than 20 years ago, at a time when such things were a lot less formal than they are now.