The National - News

Palworld enjoys popularity surge despite (or because of) outrage from Pokemon fans

- Faisal Salah

Anew title is causing quite a stir in the video game community, and disputed claims of plagiarism have not stopped it from finding immediate success.

Palworld is an action-adventure survival game developed and published by Pocket Pair. It allows players to customise their character and then roam an open world filled with “pals”, which are monsters inhabiting the land.

The game has drawn comparison­s to games from the famed Pokemon franchise, due to its similarly designed monsters, with attributes that can be easily confused for Pokemon.

Gamers on X, formerly Twitter, have already called the game “Pokemon with guns”, which has only drawn more attention to it, especially from Pokemon fans who are not too pleased with the similariti­es.

Whether the accusation­s are true has not yet been settled, but in the meantime all the talk has seemingly propelled the title to the top of the charts. The game sold more than six million copies in its first four days of release, the company behind it has announced.

Despite a successful launch, the game’s developer, Pocket Pair, has also shared news that its team has received hurtful comments, some of which were alleged death threats.

The community manager at the company, who goes by the name Bucky, wrote:

The game’s developer Pocket Pair revealed that its team has received hurtful comments

“Franticall­y working through all my DMs and emails! I promise! However, you’ll excuse me if I skip over the death threats, threats to the company and massively outlandish claims.”

The threats have been attributed to fans who think Pocket Pair outright ripped off Pokemon for their game.

Pocket Pair chief executive Takuro Mizobe shared a post on X saying: “Currently, we are receiving slanderous comments against our artists, and we are seeing tweets that appear to be death threats.”

He added: “I would appreciate it if you would refrain from slandering the artists involved in Palworld.”

To anyone who sees the game, the confusion might be justified on first glance. Both Palworld and Pokemon involve capturing, battling with and growing monsters in an open world. But that is where the similariti­es end, defenders of the game have argued. Palworld allows players more freedom in their tasks. The monsters in Palworld do share a passing resemblanc­e to Pokemon, but there is enough there to distinguis­h between the two, many have said.

The team at Pocket Pair have hit back at the allegation­s, saying their game is more about survival and crafting, and should be compared to games such as Ark Survival Evolved rather than Pokemon.

Palworld is also aiming for a different audience, some have said, steering more towards adult humour and satire as opposed to the child-friendly world in Pokemon games. Some players were not content with the comparison­s though, as a modificati­on has already been created to swap the characters and monsters in Palworld to look like Pokemon.

This “mod”, as they are called, should only add to the confusion. The modificati­on’s creator, a YouTuber who goes by the name Toasted Shoes, sent a post on X that read, “Nintendo has come for me, please leave me in your thoughts and prayers,” signalling that the Japanese gaming company is not content with his copyright infringing modificati­on.

As things stand, Palworld only seems to be increasing in popularity. The game reached 1.5 million concurrent players on gaming platform Steam, making it the third mostplayed game on the platform.

 ?? AFP ?? Palworld, dismissed as ‘Pokemon with Guns’ when it was announced, is selling fast
AFP Palworld, dismissed as ‘Pokemon with Guns’ when it was announced, is selling fast

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