Global marketing powerhouse and occasional football side Manchester United are suing both Sega and developers Sports Interactive over their Football Manager series, claiming that the gameās use of āManchester Unitedā as an unlicensed team name is āwrongfulā.
As The Guardian report, United say that āthe products and services that are licensed by the claimant benefit from an association with the clubās winning culture and its brand valuesā, and that when it comes to Football Managerās use of the team nameāand not its crest or kitāāconsumers expect to see the club crest next to the name Manchester United ⦠and this failure to do so amounts to wrongful useā.
In their defence, Sega and SI point out that the Football Manager games have done this since 1992 without anyone complaining, and that use of the team name is āa legitimate reference to the Manchester United football team in a football contextā.
They also say that, despite Unitedās legal team currently taking this stand, other parts of the organisation, like their analytics and scouting departments, have actually contacted SI in the past looking to make use of the gameās famously comprehensive player skills database
Of greater consequence to the gameās fanbase than a stoush over a single clubās name, though, is the fact United have told the court that they would also like to go after Football Managerās ability for fans to import custom crests, kits and loads of other licensed stuff via mods (though a judge is currently deciding whether this later addition to the list of allegations will be allowed to form part of the suit).
The base game ships missing many of the sportās biggest licenses, but with a few clicks Football Manager makes it easy to have fan-made packs like theseimported into the game. Itās a key part of serious Football Manager fandom, because who wouldnāt want to make the experience as realistic and authentic as possible?
Unitedās barrister Simon Malynicz QC argues however that SI should be stopped from allowing āthe practice of supplying āpatchesā or āmodsā, essentially downloadable files containing replica trademarks, which consumers then incorporate into the gameā, and which benefits Football Manager by āavoiding the need to take any licence and enjoying increased sales of their gameā.
In my legal experience as a Football Manager fan, that would be some bullshit right there.