Epic Games is once again being sued for a dance emote and they’re not taking it lying down
The lawsuit specifically covers the use of the dance and a certain Jack O’ Lantern appearance, despite Epic having already bought the rights to the dance.
The lawsuit specifically covers the use of the dance and a certain Jack O’ Lantern appearance, despite Epic having already bought the rights to the dance.
Fortnite happens to have a very bad habit of outright stealing dance moves. One recent example is 2 Milly’s Milly Rock dance, which you can find in Fortnite as the Swipe It emote. One other recent example? Donald Faison’s glorious moves from the even more glorious TV series Scrubs, stolen straight from the TV screen and repackaged as the Poison dance.
Bungie pays tribute to Monty Python, fans use spare Bright Dust (or actual cash cha-ching baby) to get in on that affection and everyone is happy as they inappropriately bust out a silly walk. Or, and hear me out here, you can use that Silly Walk ™ for evil. Like glitching your Guardian into spaces where they really shouldn’t be.
It would be naive to say climate change is not real — or that …
A spooky European village. Properly scary castle mania. Vampires. Werewolves! The only thing more frightening, is a glimpse at your empty bank account when it comes to deciding whether or not you can grab Resident Evil Village this month. Capcom's successor to its long-running survival-horror franchise is finally out, and if you've read our review then you know the game is a winner on multiple levels.
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