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Final Fantasy VII: The Web Series (Kickstarter)

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16 points by yami 12 years ago · 13 comments

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taspeotis 12 years ago

A lot of "unofficial fan based" projects seem to be tolerated by the IP owners while there's no money involved, even if they get quite large.

These guys are asking for $400,000.

Anyone taking bets on how long until we see some sort of takedown notice?

  • zyb09 12 years ago

    Isn't it very naive of them to think they can do this unlicensed? They are basically using SquareEnix's IP to raise money for their project - that is not going to work.

  • rquirk 12 years ago

    Yep, Square has a history of protecting their trademarks too. They shut down "Crimson Echoes" which was a no-cash-involved fan game too based on Chrono Trigger.

  • thenomad 12 years ago

    They don't address the licensing issue in their "risks" section (or anywhere else), either. That doesn't speak greatly for their chances.

    As a fellow webseries guy, I wish them luck, but I fear they're going to need it, in heaps.

  • M4v3R 12 years ago

    Pretty soon I guess. Square shut down many fan projects that didn't even use their assets (like Chrono Trigger resurrection) and weren't supposed to earn money. They basically send DMCAs just for using their trademark (i.e. game title).

  • pathy 12 years ago

    That was my first thought as well. I could not see that it said anywhere that they had been Ok'd by Square Enix.

    I can't imagine Square will be happy with that.

jwarren 12 years ago

That looks like a very poor, straight-up bad idea. The story was fun as a game, but I feel a lot of doubt that it would anything beyond laughable as a film.

I wish them luck if they really want to do it, but I certainly won't be backing it.

chewxy 12 years ago

So how soon till Square shuts this down with a C&D?

dromidas 12 years ago

At first I was like ehhh... but the video is quite good. I look forward to it.

scrrr 12 years ago

Yeah that was a nice game, but really. Take your money and put it into something useful. There's diseases to be cured, politicians to be lobbied, philosophical questions to be investigated, space to explore.. There's poverty and war.

We used to like games when we were kids, of course. But we are adults now. (I assume that most HN-readers are adults.) Shouldn't we care about different things?

  • DizzyDoo 12 years ago

    I care about poverty and war and politics and curing cancer, of course, but that's not all I think about 100% of the time. I can only speak so definitely for myself, but I'd be willing to bet that you don't either. You could apply your logic to all sorts of things, and look down your nose at having a drink with friends, or walks along the beach, or painting, or playing the piano. Why play with your kids, there are diseases to be cured, come on! None of really live our lives like that.

    Actually, my main problem with this particular Kickstarter is the blatant copyright infringement, which Kickstarter usually takes down.

  • mhurron 12 years ago

    > We used to like games when we were kids, of course. But we are adults now. (I assume that most HN-readers are adults.) Shouldn't we care about different things?

    I must have missed the memo, exactly what age was I supposed to stop liking things I used to like and give up all entertainment?

    Not that this project has an ice cubes chance in hell, but that's beside the point.

  • jwarren 12 years ago

    Oh for crying out loud. This is a childish argument. Does every human endeavour need a quantifiable amount of "goodness" attached to it?

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