
The “Lineage” series and NCsoft make their second appearance on our list, this time for “Lineage II.” Apparently, NCsoft make such good games that they should be illegal. If you ever wondered why your favorite athlete’s in-game tattoos don’t match the ones they have in real-life, this case probably had something to do with it. Christopher Escobedo wanted $4.1 million is damages, but was awarded $22,500, which, by the way, the same amount Condit was paid for his likeness to appear in the game. In fact, one game in particular, “UFC Undisputed 3”, was so detailed in its depiction of fighter Carlos Condit and his lion tattoo that the artist of said tattoo felt the game company had infringed on his copyright on the artwork. This is especially the case for many sports games. Games these days are becoming hyper-realistic. They refused, and had the backing of the court because her logs seemed to prove that she continued enchanting items after the sword broke and even bought a spell to help her enchant. She claimed she had tried to enchant the sword by accident, and tried to get NCsoft to restore the item.

That’s a lot of money for a bunch of pixels. It turns out that the sword was worth $28 thousand dollars on the resale market. Probably tired from a day’s worth of killing monsters, a 64 year-old Korean woman, tried to enchant the ultra-rare Jin Myung Hwang's Conduct Sword in “Lineage,” but her failed attempt resulted in the sword’s destruction. The pair had been featured in 9 video games up to that point and they generally received mostly negative reviews, so maybe Acclaim was doing them a favor. Their lawyer claimed that the publisher had ruined the twins’ video game brand by not releasing the game.
#It takes two sued Pc
The game was to be released for the PlayStation 2, Game Boy Advance, Game Cube and PC in 2003.
#It takes two sued plus
These celebrity twins sued Acclaim Entertainment for over $177 thousand dollars in royalties and interest plus an added $300 thousand for canceling their game “Mary-Kate and Ashley in ACTION!” based on their animated TV show of the same name.

Somebody call Phoenix Wright – we’re heading to court! Welcome to and today we’ll be counting down the Top 10 Times People Sued Game Companies.įor this list, we’ll be looking at all those times people felt so ripped off, mislead, or even addicted that they sued some of the biggest developers and publishers in the industry.
