The Board Game Designers Guide to US Intellectual Property Law Cont. - Part 2

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Meeple Mountain - April 1 2022

Section 2: What Legal Protections Are Practical?

Patents

While board games, as well as game boards, parts, and certain methods of play, can be patented if they fulfill the strict requirements listed above, it is usually impractical to try and get a patent for a tabletop game. Currently, many games on the market are reworks of, or variations on gameplay mechanics of existing games, such as worker placement, area control, deck-building, etc. Due to this, these types of games would probably struggle to meet the strict requirements of novelty and nonobviousness.

More relevant, however, is money. Most game designers do not have the private financial means to afford paying the attorney’s fees and other costs associated with applying for a patent, which can run into the tens of thousands of dollars. These costs can run even higher when incorporating costs for patent enforcement. So, while patents theoretically can protect certain aspects of a game, they are not financially practical to pursue for most game designers.

Copyright

A designer can, however, obtain copyright protection for several characteristics of a game. Minis, cards, box artwork, game board art, or other components of a game may be protectable as pictorial, graphic, or sculptural works. In addition, text-heavy games such as RPGs and other word-based games may also be protected as literary works under the Copyright Act of 1976. Depending on the context, copyright protection can be extended to fictional characters, if they have “distinctive character traits and attributes” and are “sufficiently delineated to be recognizable as the same character whenever it appears.”1 This is most applicable to things such as modules and campaigns for tabletop RPGs.

However, what is paramount to understand is that a game’s mechanics and conceptual rules—the “heart” of a game, are uncopyrightable. The Copyright Office’s factsheet on games makes this explicit:

Copyright law does not protect the idea for a game, its name or title, or the method or methods for playing it. Nor does copyright protect any idea, system, method, device, or trademark material involved in developing, merchandising, or playing a game. Once a game has been made public, nothing in the copyright law prevents others from developing another game based on similar principles. Copyright protects only the particular manner of an author’s expression in literary, artistic, or musical form. 2

In theory, then, if someone were to replicate the basics of a game in terms of rules, but write them differently, and did not copy any artwork, visuals, text, etc., then that could potentially be acceptable under copyright law.

Trademark

Trademark protection is perhaps the most relevant protection a designer can pursue for their game. However, it does not protect the whole game. It is used to protect the names, logos, slogans, and other distinctive aspects of the games. Examples of trademarks in games include the “tap” symbol and the mana symbols in Magic: The Gathering, and the D&D dragon logo. This prevents other copycat games or designers from using the name of your game or other distinctive aspects of your game in order to fool your consumers into thinking that their product is in fact your product. Trademark applies even in situations where a logo, name, etc. is “confusingly similar” to the trademark-protected aspects of your game.

“Trade dress,” which refers to the overall image and appearance of the game, includes its size, shape, colors, graphics, and packaging, and may also be protectable if it’s considered to be “inherently distinctive” (i.e., people immediately recognize X game merely by looking at the package) or have acquired distinctiveness through secondary meaning. Some examples of inherently distinctive trade dress include the eggshell blue of Tiffany boxes, the fluted shape of a Coca-Cola bottle, and the shape of an iPhone.

Section 3: What Is Typically Done?

For the text in rules, cards, and other components, as well as any artwork on the box, game board, card, etc., copyright protection is conferred as soon as they are fixed, so registration isn’t strictly necessary. However, registration is relatively inexpensive ($35 in the United States) and can give you the advantage of 1) presumption of ownership of the copyright and 2) a date of registration denoting ownership of the copyright. Even so, copyright registration for these components is rare among game designers.

Game names, logos, and slogans are typically the first things to be trademarked. The first step before registration though would be to conduct a trademark search to see if there is already an existing trademark for whatever name/logo/slogan you are trying to protect to ensure you do not accidentally infringe on another person’s mark. Additionally, if you feel that your box design, game board design, card layout, etc. is sufficiently distinctive to warrant trade dress protection, then this is a potential avenue to explore.

A common law trademark is a trademark established solely through use in commerce in a specific geographic area. While you still have common law protection for a trademark without registration, federal registration will give you the “presumption of validity,” without needing to go through the process of proving that 1) You own the trademark; 2) You have an established reputation with the mark; 3) your reputation has been affected because of someone else’s use of the mark; and 4) people were deceived into thinking they bought from you when they did not.

In short, if you want to err on the side of caution, opt for copyright and trademark registration.

For copyright: https://www.copyright.gov/registration/

For trademark: https://www.uspto.gov/trademarks/basics/trademark-process

As a general matter, it is wise to have legal counsel ready when it comes to protecting your products. The goal of this article is to provide game designers with an easy-to-understand guide to IP law, and provide general legal principles to help game designers. Designers should consult with counsel about specific questions that apply to them. For a reasonable fixed rate, there are many attorneys out there who can help walk you through “due-diligence” searches for existing trademarks and/or copyrights as well as how to register your own copyrights and trademarks. They can also review any contract, NDA, etc. that pertains to IP and commercial rights when dealing with a mass-market publisher. Moreover, an experienced attorney can help draft a cease-and-desist letter if you find someone is infringing on your IP, or conversely, if someone has sent you a letter claiming you have infringed on theirs. Legal posturing is often used as a scare tactic, whether the alleged claim of infringement holds water or not. In either case, be prepared.

To read the first part of this blog, click here.

This article originally appeared on Meeple Mountain.


  1. D.C. Comics v. Towle, 802 F.3d 1012, 1019-21 (9th Cir. 2015).
  2. U.S. Copyright Office Factsheet FL-108: Copyright Registration of Games (Dec. 2011).

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DISCLAIMER: Because of the generality of this update, the information provided herein may not be applicable in all situations and should not be acted upon without specific legal advice based on particular situations.

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