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The second lawsuit concerns Interplay's continued sale of ''Fallout'', ''Fallout 2'', ''Fallout Tactics'', and ''Fallout: Brotherhood of Steel''. According to Bethesda, the licensing contract requires all advertising, packaging and other promotional material to be sent to them for approval first, which, according to the lawsuit, was never done by Interplay regarding neither the ''Fallout Trilogy'' pack, nor any of the releases through Good Old Games, Steam and other digital distribution platforms. Bethesda also claims that the name ''Trilogy'' constitutes unfair competition, since it suggests that the pack includes Bethesda's own ''Fallout 3''.<ref>[[User blog:Ausir/Bethesda vs. Interplay - more detail|Bethesda vs. Interplay - more detail]]</ref>
 
The second lawsuit concerns Interplay's continued sale of ''Fallout'', ''Fallout 2'', ''Fallout Tactics'', and ''Fallout: Brotherhood of Steel''. According to Bethesda, the licensing contract requires all advertising, packaging and other promotional material to be sent to them for approval first, which, according to the lawsuit, was never done by Interplay regarding neither the ''Fallout Trilogy'' pack, nor any of the releases through Good Old Games, Steam and other digital distribution platforms. Bethesda also claims that the name ''Trilogy'' constitutes unfair competition, since it suggests that the pack includes Bethesda's own ''Fallout 3''.<ref>[[User blog:Ausir/Bethesda vs. Interplay - more detail|Bethesda vs. Interplay - more detail]]</ref>
 
Bethesda also claimed that they had only back licensed the name Fallout to Interplay but none of the associated lore (monsters, settings, characters, etc etc). Yet in the back license it clearly states what will happen if Interplay were to fail to meet its obligations by them having to remove all such lore but they would still be able to continue with work they had produced. This was simply Bethesda suing Interplay into the ground.
 
   
 
The lawsuit ended some time in early January 2012, with Bethesda paying Interplay $US 2 Million in exchange for Interplay dropping all claim to the Fallout brand.
 
The lawsuit ended some time in early January 2012, with Bethesda paying Interplay $US 2 Million in exchange for Interplay dropping all claim to the Fallout brand.

Revision as of 15:07, 2 November 2014

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Gametitle-FO1Gametitle-FO2Gametitle-FOTGametitle-FOBOSGametitle-VBGametitle-FOT2
Gametitle-FO1Gametitle-FO2Gametitle-FOTGametitle-FOBOSGametitle-VBGametitle-FOT2Gametitle-FOBOS2PV13
BY GAMERS MUTANTS FOR GAMERS MUTANTS— Interplay's motto during the development of all Interplay Fallout games

Interplay Entertainment (founded as Interplay Productions) is the company that published Fallout, Fallout 2, Fallout Tactics, and Fallout: Brotherhood of Steel. It was the owner of the Fallout franchise before it was sold to Bethesda Softworks.

Background

Under Brian Fargo

In 1982, Adhaminto Boone had to close down his small games company, Boone Corporation. Brian Fargo, who was vice-president of R&D, took along some of the senior programmers to found Interplay productions. The small outfit published several titles, but finally struck gold with The Bard's Tale and Wasteland, which gave them the financial backing they needed to start publishing their own titles, instead of relying on EA as their publisher.

They started publishing games from other companies in 1988, but it wasn't until 1993 that they managed another hit, and started the "Descent" series, first produced by Parallax Software. Starting in 1992, they were noted for pumping out a few Star Trek games, and in 1997 they released Fallout and MDK, followed by Baldur's Gate in 1998. Although the games were successful Interplay continued to bleed money and was on the verge of bankruptcy. Interplay went public that same year in order to avoid bankruptcy and pay off debt. The name of the company was changed to "Interplay Entertainment Corp". Interplay Entertainment Corp continued to publish outstanding games but at the same time bleed money. In a bid to shore up the companies finances they struck a deal with French company Titus Interactive for financing in return for stock and stock options. Unfortunately losses mounted and control of the company went to Titus Interactive.


Under Herve Caen

Downfall

Interplay, under control of Titus installed a new president, Herve Caen. Fargo stayed on for a while as company chairman. Several years later Titus was starting to get into financial and legal trouble and eventually had to close business in 2004. Since his installment as president, Caen had tried to shift the company's attention towards console games, an area where the company had never had much success. They missed the 2002 Christmas season, and Interplay was clearly on the road to oblivion from years of poor results starting around 1996.

Interplay was evicted by its landlord for not paying rent on the very day that Titus quit business, and most of the remaining staff had to leave because they weren't getting paid. Herve and a few others relocated to another office, trying to get the company going again by selling off their various assets, but its various debts were simply too staggering. They licensed the rights to Fallout 3 to Bethesda Softworks.

On November 29, 2006, Interplay was served with an involuntary bankruptcy order. The following day, Interplay filed a SEC form, stating their intent to seek European funding for a Fallout MMOG project. The form notes their intent to begin development in January 2007.

Re-emergence

Interplay logo

Interplay's 1997 logo and motto "By Gamers For Gamers"

In November 2006, Interplay, still headed by Herve Caen, filed a Form 8-K filing to the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) regarding a potential Fallout massively multiplayer online game.[1] In April 2007, Bethesda Softworks, the developer of Fallout 3, purchased full rights to the Fallout IP for $5.75 million USD. While Bethesda now owned the rights to the Fallout MMO IP, clauses in the purchase agreement state allowed Interplay to license the rights to the development of the MMO.[2] Specific requirements were stated in the agreement that if not met, Interplay would immediately lose and forfeit its license rights for Fallout. Development must have begun within 24 months of the date of the agreement (April 4, 2007), and Interplay must have secured $30 million within that time frame or forfeit its rights to license. Interplay would furthermore need to launch the MMOG within 4 years of the beginning of development, and pay Bethesda 12 percent of sales and subscription fees for the use of the IP.

In November 2007, Interplay reopened in-house development and hired Fallout developer Jason D. Anderson as creative director for an unannounced MMO.[3] Given the aforementioned facts, it's most likely that the game Anderson is working on is Interplay's Fallout MMO, given that he is the contact name of Interplay's jobs appliance and that Fallout is referred in the job requirements.[4]

On June 30, 2008, it was announced that Interactive Game Group, LLC (created by Frederic Chesnais, former Chief Executive Officer of Atari, which now also owns MicroProse) purchased 2,000,000 shares of Interplay stock, as consideration for entering into a game production agreement.

On April 2, 2009 Interplay announced a binding letter of intent with Masthead Studios, a Bulgarian-based developer, to fund the development of Fallout Online. Masthead and Interplay teams will work together under the direction and control of Interplay to complete development of the project.[5][6]

Iply-logo

Interplay's current logo

In 2010, Interplay formed Interplay Discovery for the purpose of making pinball and other arcade games, to help fund Project V13.

On December 31, 2010 Interplay stated that they currently had a loss of over $2.8 million in deficit and over the previous financial year lost over $1 million due mostly to what they described as historic operating losses and deficits in shareholder equity. Due to this the company announced in late May of that year that they had significant doubts as to their ability to function as an ongoing business concern. [7]

Legal problems

On April 15, 2009, it was announced that Bethesda Softworks moved to rescind the Fallout MMORPG license.[8] On September 8, 2009, Bethesda filed two lawsuits, accusing Interplay of two counts of breach of contract, trademark infringement and unfair competition. In the first lawsuit, Bethesda claims that Interplay is in breach of the Fallout MMO agreement for failure to commence full scale development by April 4, 2009 and to secure certain funding for the game. Interplay disputes these claims.

The second lawsuit concerns Interplay's continued sale of Fallout, Fallout 2, Fallout Tactics, and Fallout: Brotherhood of Steel. According to Bethesda, the licensing contract requires all advertising, packaging and other promotional material to be sent to them for approval first, which, according to the lawsuit, was never done by Interplay regarding neither the Fallout Trilogy pack, nor any of the releases through Good Old Games, Steam and other digital distribution platforms. Bethesda also claims that the name Trilogy constitutes unfair competition, since it suggests that the pack includes Bethesda's own Fallout 3.[9]

The lawsuit ended some time in early January 2012, with Bethesda paying Interplay $US 2 Million in exchange for Interplay dropping all claim to the Fallout brand.

Bethesda now owns all rights to the Fallout name and IP with the exception of sales of the first 3 games (Fallout, Fallout 2, and Fallout Tactics) which will continue through till December 31st 2013 at which point Bethesda then controls publishing and distribution of these games. ZeniMax Media Inc. (Owner of Bethesda). This means Bethesda now has full rights to produce further Fallout games including MMO's.

Post lawsuit

In May 2012, Interplay attempted to resurrect one of their remaining dormant IP's - Battle Chess - farming development to Subdued Software, with Interplay publishing. Seeking funding via a Kickstarter, the project fell well short of its $100,000 goal, with only $16,000 being pledged. It has since been placed on steam as a part of the steam "early access" program.

Despite the loss of the Fallout franchise and many fans belief that the game had been canceled, Interplay continuously listed the PV13 project as "coming soon" on their website for some time afterwards. This has also since been removed without further comment, or refund.

On 20 December 2012, Interplay launched on the Black Isle website a funding campaign for a new Project V13, and confirmed the work on the previous incarnation had been abandoned. They proposed to construct a prototype game in order to encourage the eventual development of a Strategy RPG. Press response to the campaign was generally negative, noting a lack of rewards, beyond access to a proposed forum for contributors to the campaign, no indication of funding goals, and the end product being a prototype, not an actual product.

Gallery

References