(YouTube / Ziggy)

You may feel a strange, unnerving sensation walking through IKEA's maze of affordable furniture in-between plates of Swedish meatballs, but the furniture chain definitely doesn't want that creeping dread to be so literal.

IKEA has recently sent a cease-and-desist to solo indie video game developer Ziggy, whose game The Store Is Closed just passed $61,000 in its successful Kickstarter campaign. The game would find players stuck overnight in an evil furniture store that also contains some SCP labs and some creepy ghoulies who serve as the staff.

The setting is clearly inspired by IKEA, notably the logo and storefront. The trailer's opening shot shows the exterior of the game's store, called STYR, rendered in big yellow letters on a blue warehouse, just like a typical IKEA. The inside somewhat resembles an IKEA as well, with its big open floorplan and a seemingly endless supply of furniture. The trailer's narrator even mentions a "café" in the store.

Still, is this enough for IKEA to say Ziggy is clearly infringing on their copyright? It apparently seems to think so. According to the cease-and-desist reported on by Kotaku, IKEA's New York lawyers have written to Ziggy saying:

“Your game uses a blue and yellow sign with a Scandinavian name on the store, a blue box-like building, yellow vertical striped shirts identical to those worn by IKEA personnel, a gray path on the floor, furniture that looks like IKEA furniture, and product signage that looks like IKEA signage. All the foregoing immediately suggest that the game takes place in an IKEA store.”

Among other issues cited by IKEA is the fact that multiple news outlets writing about the game have used IKEA's name in their headlines. IKEA cites publications that ran headlines like "Someone Has Made a Survival Horror Game Set In IKEA."

Ziggy has 10 days to alter these assets lest he gets sued. As IKEA is a billion-dollar enterprise and Ziggy is more or less "some guy," he tells Kotaku he plans on complying, as he cannot afford a lawsuit of any kind, even if his argument against a lawsuit would be sound.

"I was going to spend the last week of my Kickstarter preparing an update for all the new alpha testers," he said. "But now I’ve got to desperately revamp the entire look of the game so I don’t get sued."

Still, though this situation is crushing for a solo indie game developer, there may be a silver lining for Ziggy. At the time Kotaku reported on the cease-and-desist Friday, The Store Is Closed was reported to have reached $49,000 on Kickstarter. At the time of writing this article, three days after Kotaku's report, that number is now up to $62,000.


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Comments 9 total

Ranch Dressing

This is such a Nintendo thing to do, ngl.

0

The Christmas Pyro

Bullies never change, do they?

0

Rhettorical

He would almost assuredly win in court, but he's making a smart call here. IKEA doesn't care about winning, they care about bleeding him dry. Lawsuits cost a lot of money and take a lot of time and that's what IKEA is banking on. They can afford to drag it out and lose, he can't afford to drag it out and win.

This is, quite frankly, a load of horseshit.

2

KoimanZX

The fact that companies and wealthy individuals can just spam lawsuits to force opponents into submission is reprehensible.

2

Briham

Curious. There's a horror novel, Horrorstör by Grady Hendrix, that has a similar premise, including being set in an obvious reference to Ikea, yet as far as I know, the author hasn't had any trouble. I guess Hendrix put in enough differences to avoid trademark infringement.

1

WarLordM

I thought the Swedes were supposed to be civil, cultured people. Can't see myself financially supporting them after this kind of move.

0

JustOrdinaryMan

Are they even know what "parody" is? As far as I know, they can only sue if the dev literally using "IKEA" name on their game.

4

QuasiMadman

Just once I want to see someone just disregard one of these absurd C&D letters.

You're threatening legal action to someone for making a game, go on, be the whole bitch – I want to see what a court case looks like when the legal team of a large corporation just get laughed out of the courtroom!

3

Woooinion

This is an utterly frivolous over-reach of a law suit, and Ikea needs to be financially punished for even attempting it.

Parody is fair use.

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