Mithril Roshi
113 posts

Mithril Roshi
@Mithril_Roshi
Game Dev that loves gaming and many hobbies! Dyslexic, so sorry for typos








Not sure why these outlets are trying to spin this this as some Nintendo loss. Pocket Pair publicly said they had to change or remove certain things due to the lawsuit, so now that they've done that, and Pocket Pair is now imitating Monster Hunter, the threat been neutralized.










New reports suggest that Nintendo and The Pokémon Company may receive only around $30,000 in damages even if they win their patent lawsuit against Palworld developer Pocketpair. That amount matches what they originally asked for when the case was filed in Japan. Imagine how much Nintendo spent on lawyers just to get that amount of money.

New reports suggest that Nintendo and The Pokémon Company may receive only around $30,000 in damages even if they win their patent lawsuit against Palworld developer Pocketpair. That amount matches what they originally asked for when the case was filed in Japan. Imagine how much Nintendo spent on lawyers just to get that amount of money.


New reports suggest that Nintendo and The Pokémon Company may receive only around $30,000 in damages even if they win their patent lawsuit against Palworld developer Pocketpair. That amount matches what they originally asked for when the case was filed in Japan. Imagine how much Nintendo spent on lawyers just to get that amount of money.


Vanillaware founder George Kamitani - wants to put their other games on PC (Unicorn Overlord, 13 Sentinels, Dragon's Crown, etc.) but says it's up to the publisher to finance the ports



According to a report from Automaton, Nintendo and The Pokémon Company have narrowed their patent lawsuit against Palworld to older versions of the game. Court documents indicate the scope was revised in November 2025. The change stems from several “preventive” updates by developer Pocketpair. Earlier patches removed the ability to summon Pals by throwing Pal Spheres and changed gliding so players now use a glider instead of riding Pals. Pocketpair previously said these changes were made in response to the lawsuit to ensure the game’s continued development. Nintendo and The Pokémon Company are still pursuing the case and seeking damages, but the dispute may now focus on mechanics from earlier builds rather than the current version of Palworld.






According to a report from Automaton, Nintendo and The Pokémon Company have narrowed their patent lawsuit against Palworld to older versions of the game. Court documents indicate the scope was revised in November 2025. The change stems from several “preventive” updates by developer Pocketpair. Earlier patches removed the ability to summon Pals by throwing Pal Spheres and changed gliding so players now use a glider instead of riding Pals. Pocketpair previously said these changes were made in response to the lawsuit to ensure the game’s continued development. Nintendo and The Pokémon Company are still pursuing the case and seeking damages, but the dispute may now focus on mechanics from earlier builds rather than the current version of Palworld.





















