Video Game Trademark: Five Reasons to Protect Your Videogame Today

Video Game Trademark: Five Reasons to Protect Your Videogame Today

One of the biggest mistakes I commonly see video game developers make is waiting too long to trademark their game name or even not trademarking it at all. Platforms like Steam for PC, the App Store for iOS, and Google Play for Android have made it easier for small companies and independent developers to create and distribute videogames. Thanks to these platforms, the videogame market is open to virtually anyone with a computer to create and distribute their software. In 2014, close to 500 iOS and 250 Android games launched every day.[1]

 

However, as easy as it has become to create and distribute your own unique game, it is even easier for someone to copy your game and profit off of your hard work. This is evident from the numerous clones of popular videogames like Flow Free, Threes, 2048, and Flappy Bird that crowd the market.

 

S:\Google Drive\McArthur Law\2048.PNG

2048, itself a clone of Threes, could have at least prevented countless other clones from copying its name with a simple trademark registration.

 

Clone-creating developers do not increase the total user base of a game. Rather, these cloners cannibalize the market that you’ve worked so hard to build, diverting your revenue without adding anything new to the marketplace. It is more important now than ever to trademark your videogame and protect your brand.

 

What is a Trademark?

 

A trademark is “a word, phrase, logo, or other graphic symbol used by a manufacturer or seller to distinguish its product or products from those of others.”[2] Trademarks can be a word like “Nintendo” or a slogan such as “Greatness Awaits.”

https://cdn02.nintendo-europe.com/media/images/03_teaser_module_1_square/news_1/generic/TM_NintendoLogo_sharing_image_400.png https://i.ytimg.com/vi/3i5KeEBbfW8/maxresdefault.jpg[3]

 

Trademarks are not limited to unique words like “Pokémon” or “Tetris.” Any English word can be trademarked. For instance, “Apple” is trademarked and protected for use on computers and software. “Flow” is trademarked for the “Flow Free” line of mobile games. Ultimately, the goal of trademarking is to protect the consumer by creating clear brand identification so they can easily identify the source of the products they are purchasing.

 

Do I Have to Actually “Register a Trademark?

 

Technically, you can put a TM next to your game title without filing a trademark registration, but that will not give you anything close to all of the protection your company needs. You should always take the next step and register your trademark with the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO). Then you can level up the TM into an ®. Having the ® symbol wards off copiers and cloners, gives you extra teeth to enforce your trademark in court, and makes it less likely that someone else will be able to use their own trademark to shut down your game.

 

When Should I Register a Trademark?

 

Right now. Ideally, you should file your trademark registration before the game is released. That way, your game has maximum protection against clones and other issues that may arise. In fact, you can trademark your game title up to three years before your game is even released. That means you can secure a game name as early in the development process as you want, locking the name up for years until you finally release your game. This is incredibly useful for avoiding the situation where you plan to use a game name for over a year, build your game around it, buy a website, and pour money into marketing and consumer awareness, only to have someone else beat you to the market with a game of the same name. If you didn’t register your trademark well ahead of time, you would be out of luck.

 

If your game is already released for some time, yet you never bothered to register the trademark, it is not too late. However, the faster the trademark is registered, the better.

 

Reasons to Trademark Your Videogame Title:

 

1. Prevent Problems Arising from Choosing a Game Title too Similar to Other Titles

 

When you hire an attorney to register your videogame title as a trademark, the attorney will do a comprehensive search for any future problems that the chosen name may encounter. This search is essential for two reasons. First, it can save you from an expensive lawsuit after the game’s release when another company has issues with your game title. Second, it will prevent you from having to change your game title after release. A registered trademark establishes your right to the game title and can prevent other companies from forcing you to change it. Changing your game title after release will result in loss of customers, complications with search engine optimization, negative reviews, marketing issues, etc.

 

2. Exclusive Use of Your Game Title

 

Trademark registration protects you against people who will steal your game title and use it for their own videogame. We could not imagine another videogame called Angry Birds, right? Having a federally registered trademark for your videogame title will prevent others from stealing it. In addition, only if you register your trademark will the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office reject other people from registering your game title as their own trademark.

 

The trademark of your game title not only protects the exact name, but it also protects anything that is “confusingly similar.” A trademark for “Flappy Bird” would stop copiers from using “Floppy Bird”, “Flappy B1rds”, and other similar titles. However, Flappy Bird was not trademarked on release. If its developer had registered a trademark of the game title, the Google Play store would not look like this:

 

S:\Desktop\flappy.PNG

 

 3. Protection Against Clones

 

Even though trademarks technically only protect your game title and not the game itself, your videogame is less likely to get cloned if you trademark the name and protect your game with the ® symbol. That’s because the registered trademark sends a strong signal that your game is not up for grabs – you have hired an attorney to protect your game’s intellectual property. Also, unsophisticated parties may not understand that the trademark only extends to the game’s title. In any case, it wards off some cloners. It’s not a coincidence that the most widely cloned games are those games where the original creator has been lazy about registering and enforcing their intellectual property. The unwillingness to protect your intellectual property essentially puts a flashing red “Take this!” sign on the title screen of your game.

 

S:\Desktop\Screenshot (Jun 2, 2015 11_41_38 AM).png S:\Desktop\Screenshot_2015-06-02-11-35-05.png

Threes” and 2048 were not registered trademarks which has helped result in thousands of clones throughout Google Play and the iOS Store.

 

4. Litigation Advantage

 

Registering your trademark early, ideally before release, can prevent others from dragging you into an expensive litigation. If, however, you are forced into court in a dispute over your videogame title, having a registered trademark is a great advantage. If your game title is challenged as too similar to someone else’s, your registered trademark registration works in your favor by creating a presumption that your trademark is valid and that you have exclusive use to the mark. Your trademark also becomes incontestable after five years. And showing a valid registration increases the amount of damages you can request in an enforcement action.

 

5. Investors and Venture Capitalists

 

Venture capitalists and huge game publishers know the value of intellectual property and are far more likely to invest in your company if you have jumped through the legal hoops to protect all of your IP. Furthermore, only if your game is trademarked will other companies approach you to license your game for related merchandise or to use in other media. Trademarks alone are a valuable asset that provide a competitive long-term advantage. Games like “Angry Birds”, for example, are able to license merchandise, board games, movies, etc. because they have registered their trademarks and copyrights.

Bonus: Worldwide Protection

Having a United States trademark registration allows you to file for trademark protection worldwide. Considering platforms like Steam, the App Store, and Google Play are available to consumers and competitors across the globe, this should not be underestimated.

 

How to Apply and Register for a Trademark?

 

I recommend only using an attorney who specializes in trademark law and avoiding do-it-yourself services like LegalZoom. You wouldn’t hire a general practitioner doctor to perform open-heart surgery, or ever consider doing it yourself, and the same consideration holds true for intellectual property law.

 

How Much Will it Cost to Register My Trademark?

 

I usually tell my clients to budget about $2,000 total for a basic clearance search, filing the trademark application, and prosecuting it through registration (which can take about a year). That price assumes there are no serious conflicts with third-party trademarks.  Obviously, trying to register a trademark that conflicts with one of Disney’s or Nintendo’s marks will be very expensive, if not impossible. You can register a trademark for your game title, the logo, your studio’s name, and any slogans you use to market your game. Considering the amount of protection a registered trademarks grants your videogame, it is a valuable business investment. Angry Birds wouldn’t be a billion-dollar brand if it had simply gone the way of Flappy Bird with its brand protection.

 

Register Your Trademark Today

 

  1. http://www.gamasutra.com/view/news/237811/500_games_launched_per_day_on_iOS_last_year_and_other_digital_sales_facts.php
  2. Black’s Law Dictionary 1630 (9th ed. 2009)
  3. https://i.ytimg.com/vi/3i5KeEBbfW8/maxresdefault.jpg
1 Comment
  • Beth R

    May 6, 2016 at 2:59 pm Reply

    While your posts is geared to video games, I’m guessing the same advice applies for tabletop role-playing games and board games? I’m asking because some businesses claim that the RPG market is so small, it’s not worth the money because it’s not going to attract squatters, clones, etc. like video games would.

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