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Sunday, September 23, 2007



According to the official web site for Plasma Pong, the download link and information page for this freeware game had been taken down until further notice.

The forums are still up, while the game itself can be acquired from Download.com and CHIP Online. Both Washington Post and Gamasutra interviews had revealed that a multi-player version was in the works before this setback.

Apparently you can't do a Pong remake without approval from Atari it seems.

Comments

Harsh! Sooo many pong remakes, yet they pick only a somewhat well known one to bust? Well who knows. Was it said it was removed due to a copyright issue?

Lawyers suck. I guess Atari must be getting ready to release an amazing next-gen pong game ;)

Stwelin:It would have been removed by request of Atari lawyers. Their job is to find things like this that would infringe on their trademarks and get them to stop. No thought goes into whether or not the item in question is damaging, they just make sure things like this get removed. If he removed "Pong" from the name, there wouldn't be an issue.

And the irony of it all is that Atari's Pong idea was initially stolen from someone else.

Yep, two paddles and a ball...one hell of a concept. He should have called it tabletop soccer. Greedy lawyers.

Maybe they could call it "Plasma Paddles"?

Up plasma creek without a paddle...It would be nice if a company that failed to release anything decent under a certain trademark in some years would lose all rights to it. But that could leave so many lawyers starving to death...

With Atari's profile going down the drain I guess they need to do something to keep the name in people's minds.

This is ridiculous. I'm sure Atari just happen to have the rights to the name "Ping Pong"? Because I'm pretty sure Plasma Pong could be seen as a riff on the name "Ping Pong".

Sounds incredible! I hope they removed it just beacouse it contains the name pong in the title.. otherwise they are crazy!

Given the state of Infogrames finances for the past two years (fighting off their second NASDAC delisting notice, still massively in debt, reporting millions of pounds in losses AND unable to take out further loans) and their increasing reliance on the Atari name and IP it's not entirely unsurprising that they're resorting to C&D's.T'aint going to make their problems go away though and considering the embarassing mess of their "updated" products, perhaps looking inwards might be a first port of call. As to why Plasma Pong? Domain name or the fact it's had massive amounts of exposure. Depending on whether it's just the usual spiderbot job or someone really took the time to flag it and fire off a C&D. I know which one my money would be on though.

Well I guess when you have a failing company going very much in the red you then have to start attacking anything you can hoping you find someone who resists so you can squeeze a few extra bucks out of them.

You are also ocassionally asked to take stuff down when negotiating a distribution/publishing deal with someone who wants to sell what you are giving away for free. So unless confirmed, this is a possibility.However, if Atari's lawyer's are on the warpath for Pong, that is regrettable.

Atari should acquire and release Plasma Pong on XBLA: everybody wins!

This is nothing other than absurd. Silly Atari, very silly...I hope Plasma Pong returns in some other form in the future.

Ehm, since when are game mechanisms patentable!?Sorry (or not), the graphics, the sounds, the programming is all new, and the main priniciple is as basic as it can get!There were hundreds of freeware Pong titles before, the most with some unique twist (powerups, you can rotate the paddle a bit,...).No company sued before about a Pacman, Boulder Dash or Tetris clone. I guess the makers are afraid of the costs that may come with a court case.

Atari is notorious for, say, ill-advised decisions. Remember when they turned down offer from the makers of Worms and refused to publish it? ;))) Now they should come to Steve with a nice suitcase of presidents' portraits and offer him a job and publishing the game for all platforms in the highest quality. But I guess, once more Atari decided to select the most conservative path...

Oh, now I remember - I wrote a PONG for GBA, in which paddles moved in every direction, I called it PONG 3D. Worse, I made it downloadable on a homebrew site. So, Atari will sue me now? :)

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