The Pokémon Company said they would “investigate and take appropriate measures to address any acts that infringe on intellectual property rights”
The studio behindPalworldnever received any formal complaint or threat of legal action from Nintendo or The Pokémon Company despite widespread debate over the open-world ‘Pokémon with guns’ survival game earlier this year.
That’s the claim from Pocketpair CEO Takuro Mizobe in a recent interview withGameFile(thanks,Eurogamer), where the dev was asked abouta pointed statement made by The Pokémon Companyin the wake ofPalworld’s release saying they would “investigate and take appropriate measures to address any acts that infringe on intellectual property rights related to the Pokémon”.
The rare - if indirect - public acknowledgement came amidstendless debateover how closely Palworld toed the line between “inspiration” and straight-up copyright infringement on Pokémon creature designs, inspiring fervent comparisons of character models, concept art and more across the internet followingits launch into early accessback in January.
Still, despite the strong words, Mizobe said that Pocketpair heard “nothing at all” from the Pokémon makers.
“Nintendo and the Pokémon Company didn’t say anything to us,” he confirmed.
“In game development, of course, sometimes we have to do it, but, as much as possible, I try to avoid creating new things,” Mizobe added.
With no legal storm in sight, Palworld’s popularity continues apace, apparently going as far as toinspire its own Palworld-likes. The blend of survival game, monster-catching adventure and ruthlessly efficient capitalism simulator in which you task caught creatures with manufacturing guns will add a new island inits incoming Sakurajima update this week, along withnew pals- including a whole new subspecies - a new raid and an extra boss to challenge. APokémon Stadium-like PvP arena modeis also set to arrive this year, too.