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this post was submitted on 23 Jan 2024
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Not that this would save the average person from litigation hell, but does Nintendo actually have a legal leg to stand on? What would make a (free) mod any different from any other artistic expression?
Also assuming the mod creator didn't do anything crazy like rip assets from an existing Pokémon game.
Copyright law doesn't really care if its commercial/personal - just if its fair use. For reuse of characters, its an esspecially high bar. In this case, its reuse of characters as-is so that wouldn't be considered transformitive, and its obviously not criticism, so it wouldn't be allowed.
For a comparison, every Pokemon is under the same protection Mickey Mouse was a decade ago. Basically, unless you're directly criticizing the art or character its not technically fair use. Even gameplay footage is a grey area. Its just a matter of how litigious Nintendo wants to be.
Edit: minor correction, commercial/personal sort-of matters, but more in a "is it competing with or damaging to the original work" sort of way - something making money looks more official and suggests more effort and intent, for example.
Could the obvious symmetry between pals and pokemon not be leveraged as a political statement on the lore, and thus critique of the in-world enslavement of pokemon? The topic has already been covered in numerous "deep-dives" in written and visual media. So long as the creator of the mod starts being smarter than he has been so far, he could easily claim the mod is intended to be satirical, could he not?
Even in parody works, you're inherently walking on eggshells. It needs to be a pretty direct and obvious ciritique of the original material. Something like PETA's Pokemon Red, White and Blue is unchallenged because its so unsubtle they'd have a reasonable defense. It would need to be a lot more than just a line in the mod description to give him a good defence. Even if it was as direct in it's criticism as PETA's game, just because he's legally probably covered, also doesn't mean he can't be taken to court, and unlike PETA, a mod-maker won't have a fortune to burn on an expensive fair-use lawsuit, nonetheless if its a riskier or more complicated case.