South Koreaโ€™s PUBG Corp, the developer of hit game Player Unknownโ€™s Battlegrounds (PUBG), is suing NetEase in the US District of California in Northern California for copyright infringement, unfair competition and trade dress infringementโ€“imitating the visual appearance of elements of intellectual propertyโ€“over the Chinese companyโ€™s Knives Out and Rules of Survival.

Even before PUBG Corp created a mobile version of its island death match officially released in China via Tencent, NetEase had released Knives Out and Rules of Survival for smartphones. PUBG Corp has alleged the games bear striking similarities to theirs in terms of gameplay, visuals, themes and even the advertising of the game on Facebook.

The case has been filed in Northern California and the 155-page document (via Gadgets 360) makes for interesting and somewhat amusing reading, especially around the copying of PUBGโ€™s โ€œwinner winner chicken dinnerโ€ (ๆ™šไธŠๅƒ้ธก) terminology for celebrating, which has become so mainstream in Chinese gaming that it now refers to this type of game in general (ๅƒ้ธกๆธธๆˆ). The use of pans in PUBG as both weapons and armor and the use of rubber chickens as weapons has appeared in Rules of Survival.

PUBG Corpโ€™s previous attempt at complaining to Appleโ€™s App Store and response from NetEase are mentioned in the filing.

PUBG Corp, a subsidiary of Bluehole, is suing NetEase for $150,000 per infringed work and $2,500 per violation, which could potentially run to millions of dollars depending on the courtโ€™s findings. The plaintiff also wants NetEase to cease operating both games.

NetEase announced via its WeChat account that Knives Out and Rules of Survival were both developed in isolation of PUBG, according to Tencent News (in Chinese).

Frank Hersey is a Beijing-based tech reporter who's been coming to China since 2001. He tries to go beyond the headlines to explain the context and impact of developments in China's tech sector. Get in...

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