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- Seen Feb 28, 2011
This is a little confusing but I'll try to make it understandable and hopefully others who can debate on this will reply.
Example Event #001:
You've making your own Pokemon Hack, but most of the sprites edits are from other existing hacks such as Ash and Misty from Naranja Edition and the Blastoise SURF sprite from Pokemon: Third Element.
Question: It considered STOLEN work if you did not get the artist permission, but if you add the spriter name to the credit list, would it considered stolen?
If it is, why so?
If we have credited to the spriter but they still say "you are a thief", would that make everyone who add uses DP Pokemons in their hacks to be a "thief" too, even if it was credited to the original spriter from GameFreak/Nintendo?
Example Event #002:
Pokemon Naranja Edition is an interesting rom hack project, and I've like to play it despite having to restart from the beginning again and again due to it's bug... I still enjoys it.
But for some others, all they does is complain and say Naranja is bad in translation wise, lots of bugs everywhere, and it's not as straight-forward as the original Pokemon RPG concept, they will intend to use that idea and make their own Orange Island version.
Question A:
People called it "being inspired"... it's good if someone wanted to make a better version of Naranja, but is it wrong to follow exactly like Naranja?
Question B:
"I can do a better English translation then this!"
...and so you did. You've hacked a hacked game, did a better English translation, which means "completely no Spanish words", and release it on your website... claimed it as your work. Is it wrong?
PS: I'll update this topic if there is anymore I can figure out. In the meantime, let's debate.
Example Event #001:
You've making your own Pokemon Hack, but most of the sprites edits are from other existing hacks such as Ash and Misty from Naranja Edition and the Blastoise SURF sprite from Pokemon: Third Element.
Question: It considered STOLEN work if you did not get the artist permission, but if you add the spriter name to the credit list, would it considered stolen?
If it is, why so?
If we have credited to the spriter but they still say "you are a thief", would that make everyone who add uses DP Pokemons in their hacks to be a "thief" too, even if it was credited to the original spriter from GameFreak/Nintendo?
Example Event #002:
Pokemon Naranja Edition is an interesting rom hack project, and I've like to play it despite having to restart from the beginning again and again due to it's bug... I still enjoys it.
But for some others, all they does is complain and say Naranja is bad in translation wise, lots of bugs everywhere, and it's not as straight-forward as the original Pokemon RPG concept, they will intend to use that idea and make their own Orange Island version.
Question A:
People called it "being inspired"... it's good if someone wanted to make a better version of Naranja, but is it wrong to follow exactly like Naranja?
Question B:
"I can do a better English translation then this!"
...and so you did. You've hacked a hacked game, did a better English translation, which means "completely no Spanish words", and release it on your website... claimed it as your work. Is it wrong?
PS: I'll update this topic if there is anymore I can figure out. In the meantime, let's debate.