By using this site, you agree to our Privacy Policy and our Terms of Use. Close

Forums - PC - Dues And DOTAs: Valve And Blizzard Reach Agreement

Well, that was close. When last we checked in on Blizzard and Valve’s legal frontlines, the two were arming up for all-out war over the DOTA name. Blizzard was adamant that it owned the “Ancients” part of “Defense of the Ancients,” and therefore, Valve had no right to trademark “DOTA” for use in DOTA 2. Happily, however, neither side will be drafting up a legal defense (of the Ancients), as the PC gaming empires have called off their cold war. Hands have been shaken and babies kissed. So then, let’s have a look at the terms.

 

In a statement received by RPS, the two ultra-developers explained that Valve will keep using “DOTA” in a commercial capacity while Blizzard has full right to apply it in relation to community maps and other non-commercial things of the like. But what of Blizzard DOTA, which seems to have evolved a coin slot somewhere down the line? Blizzard’s Rob Pardo explained:

“Both Blizzard and Valve recognize that, at the end of the day, players just want to be able to play the games they’re looking forward to, so we’re happy to come to an agreement that helps both of us stay focused on that. As part of this agreement, we’re going to be changing the name of Blizzard DOTA to Blizzard All-Stars, which ultimately better reflects the design of our game. We look forward to going into more detail on that at a later date.”

Which is kind of a far cry from Blizzard’s previous stance, but Blizzard and Valve have stated – on no uncertain terms – that they “do not plan to discuss the terms of the agreement beyond today’s announcement.” So what happened in the hotly contested rap battle between Chris Metzen and Erik Wolpaw stays in the hotly contested rap battle between Chris Metzen and Erik Wolpaw.

Really, though, for folks who just want to play games, this outcome couldn’t be much better. Everyone seems happy, nothing’s on hold, the community’s not at risk – it’s good news all around. And seeing as there was no real practical need for this scuffle anyway (a little thing called League of Legends has managed marginal success without dropping the “DOTA” bomb), I’m glad that PC gaming’s two most titanic anchors have ceased their clash. Time for merriment.

http://www.rockpapershotgun.com/2012/05/11/dues-and-dotas-valve-and-blizzard-reach-agreement/#more-107743



@TheVoxelman on twitter

Check out my hype threads: Cyberpunk, and The Witcher 3!

Around the Network

Now it's time compete against Riot's League of Legend where the bulk of the success comes from America.



Do not allow yourself to be blinded by fear and anger. Everything is only as it is.

So, Valve won.



Interest. No doubt LoL has all the spotlight now, but finally they will get some serious run for their money, which to me being a huge LoL addict, sounds great. Competition will make Riot work their asses of to keep their customers, especially against a huge title like DOTA2. Looking forward to see how this games develop.



"Trick shot? The trick is NOT to get shot." - Lucian

glad that ended rather quickly and without consequences. I'm rather dissapointed in dota 2 though. Everything just seems to move in slow motion. I thought it would just be something to get used to, but nearly 100 games later and it still just doesn't feel right. I guess I'll stick with HoN for now and hopefully blizzard all stars impresses me whenever that comes out.



Around the Network

Sounds like Blizzard realized they had no shot of winning.



I'll still be calling it Blizzard DOTA.



pezus said:
enrageorange said:

glad that ended rather quickly and without consequences. I'm rather dissapointed in dota 2 though. Everything just seems to move in slow motion. I thought it would just be something to get used to, but nearly 100 games later and it still just doesn't feel right. I guess I'll stick with HoN for now and hopefully blizzard all stars impresses me whenever that comes out.

Did you not play the original Dota?

Dota 2 will be huge. That's for sure. It will by far be the most popular game on Steam, probably for a loooong time. Not like Skyrim which was popular for a month or so and then dropped off a lot. Even the beta has ~50k players on constantly.

I don't know about Blizzard All-Stars though. They will have to work for it to get as popular as Dota 2

yea the original dota was great, but this is probably notalgia speaking. I would never go back to the game now, because of the features I am used to in modern moba games. And like I said, after playing hon, dota 2 plays way too slow and so does the original dota.

But yes, it does seem like dota 2 will probably be the new biggest game on steam once it goes live, especially since it will be free to play. Currently dota 2 does not average 50k players, that is the weekend peak. Though no doubt once it goes into open beta the numbers will skyrocket.