HomeGamesUpdatesPricingMethodology
Steam News20 July 201213y ago

Torchlight clone pulled from App Store, developer making changes

Apple has pulled a Torchlight clone from the App Store, after Runic Games complained that it was using in-game assets from their title.

Full notes

Full Torchlight update

Read the full published notes in a cleaner layout. The original post stays linked below.

What changed

0 fixes0 additions2 changes0 removals
  • UI and audio
  • Maps
changedApple has pulled a Torchlight clone from the App Store, after Runic Games complained that it was using in-game assets from their title. Studio founder Travis Baldree accused the game, Armed Heroes, of using monsters, dungeons, voices, and sound effects directly from Torchlight.
changedDevelop reports that EGLS, the Chinese company behind Armed Heroes, defended the game by claiming that they've made all the models and maps by hand. "Our team got inspirations from other brilliant games and movies, but had never straightly stole assets from Torchlight," said developer Serena Zhang. "What Mr. Travis Baldree said rudely depreciated the efforts our team had devoted into the game."

Torchlight changes

changedApple has pulled a Torchlight clone from the App Store, after Runic Games complained that it was using in-game assets from their title. Studio founder Travis Baldree accused the game, Armed Heroes, of using monsters, dungeons, voices, and sound effects directly from Torchlight.
changedDevelop reports that EGLS, the Chinese company behind Armed Heroes, defended the game by claiming that they've made all the models and maps by hand. "Our team got inspirations from other brilliant games and movies, but had never straightly stole assets from Torchlight," said developer Serena Zhang. "What Mr. Travis Baldree said rudely depreciated the efforts our team had devoted into the game."

Apple has pulled a Torchlight clone from the App Store, after Runic Games complained that it was using in-game assets from their title. Studio founder Travis Baldree accused the game, Armed Heroes, of using monsters, dungeons, voices, and sound effects directly from Torchlight.

"We're having to contact Apple about it, so, just a heads up - this may not be available for long," Baldree said.

Develop reports that EGLS, the Chinese company behind Armed Heroes, defended the game by claiming that they've made all the models and maps by hand. "Our team got inspirations from other brilliant games and movies, but had never straightly stole assets from Torchlight," said developer Serena Zhang. "What Mr. Travis Baldree said rudely depreciated the efforts our team had devoted into the game."

In a statement reported by Joystiq , EGLS says the recent controversy has brought "harm to our company's reputation" and upset players. It claims it will "modify some parts" of the game that have caused disputes rather than pressing the point with Apple, but says that if necessary, it would submit its internal documents to Apple to prove its case.

Source

Steam News / 20 July 2012

Open original post

Changelog.gg summarizes and formats this update. How we read updates.