Editing List of controversies
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===Universal Studios=== | ===Universal Studios=== | ||
{{main-wiki|Wikipedia|Universal City Studios, Inc. v. Nintendo Co., Ltd.}} | {{main-wiki|Wikipedia|Universal City Studios, Inc. v. Nintendo Co., Ltd.}} | ||
Approximately nine months after the original ''[[Donkey Kong (game)|Donkey Kong]]'' game was marketed in 1981, [[Universal Pictures|Universal Studios]] sued [[Nintendo]] and their production companies, alleging that ''Donkey Kong''{{'}}s name, story, and [[Donkey Kong|titular character]] were similar to that of the character [[King Kong]] (the rights to produce another ''{{wp|King Kong (franchise)|King Kong}}'' film had been recently won by Universal in 1976).<ref>{{cite|publisher=OpenJurist|language=en|url=openjurist.org/746/f2d/112|title=746 F. 2d 112 - Universal City Studios Inc v. Nintendo Co Ltd|accessdate=July 5, 2024}}</ref> | Approximately nine months after the original ''[[Donkey Kong (game)|Donkey Kong]]'' game was marketed in 1981, [[Universal Pictures|Universal Studios]] sued [[Nintendo]] and their production companies, alleging that ''Donkey Kong''{{'}}s name, story, and [[Donkey Kong|titular character]] were similar to that of the character [[wikipedia:King Kong|King Kong]] (the rights to produce another ''{{wp|King Kong (franchise)|King Kong}}'' film had been recently won by Universal in 1976).<ref>{{cite|publisher=OpenJurist|language=en|url=openjurist.org/746/f2d/112|title=746 F. 2d 112 - Universal City Studios Inc v. Nintendo Co Ltd|accessdate=July 5, 2024}}</ref> | ||
After seeing the success of ''Donkey Kong'' in Japan, Universal attempted to enter the gaming industry by producing a video game with [[wikipedia:Tiger Productions|Tiger Productions]] that starred King Kong and featured similar gameplay. However, in 1981, Nintendo exported ''Donkey Kong'' to the West, where it became famous, selling 60,000 arcade units and earning Nintendo $180 million in profit (from both arcade systems and console ports). This prompted Universal to terminate all contracts with Tiger and threaten to sue Nintendo and various producers of ''Donkey Kong''-related material because "[their] actions falsely suggest to the public that [its] product originates with or is authorized, sponsored or approved by the owner of the King Kong name, character and story." | After seeing the success of ''Donkey Kong'' in Japan, Universal attempted to enter the gaming industry by producing a video game with [[wikipedia:Tiger Productions|Tiger Productions]] that starred King Kong and featured similar gameplay. However, in 1981, Nintendo exported ''Donkey Kong'' to the West, where it became famous, selling 60,000 arcade units and earning Nintendo $180 million in profit (from both arcade systems and console ports). This prompted Universal to terminate all contracts with Tiger and threaten to sue Nintendo and various producers of ''Donkey Kong''-related material because "[their] actions falsely suggest to the public that [its] product originates with or is authorized, sponsored or approved by the owner of the King Kong name, character and story." |