Pokémon Company will “investigate” Palworld in light of plagiarism accusations
Enlarge / Everyone is focused on the Pals that look a lot like Pokemon; meanwhile, this guy is just a Totoro painted yellow. (credit: Pocketpair)
This past weekend, a monster-catching survival game called Palworld took Steam by storm; the game has sold over 8 million copies and has been sitting at the top of Steam's "Top Selling" and "Most Played" charts all week. As of this writing, Steam's dashboard claims that just under 2 million players are currently exploring Palworld, twice as many asCounter-Strike 2 (the second game on the list).
You can tell just from looking at screenshots from developer Pocketpair that many of Palworld's monster designs are clearly inspired by designs from the Pokemon series, but the game's surprise success has led to greater scrutiny. Some observers have claimed that Pocketpair has taken actual 3D models from the games and modified them to seem original. (That has also prompted counter-claims that those 3D models were fudged to make them seem more similar, though it seems the alterations just scaled the models up and down to make them easier to compare.)
Today, the Pokemon Company released a brief statement about "another company's game released in January 2024," which could be a reference to a non-Palworld game but can only realistically be a reference to Palworld. The company will "investigate and take appropriate measures" in response to any asset theft or other infringement that it discovers.