Gamer Update
  • Home
  • About us
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
Sunday, Jul 27, 2025
Gamer UpdateGamer Update
Font ResizerAa
  • Home
  • About us
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
Search
  • Home
  • About us
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
Follow US
- Advertisement -
Ad image
Main

Bungie has motion to dismiss Destiny 2 copyright lawsuit denied over ‘vaulted’ campaign storyline

Author
Last updated: 06.05.2025 17:59
Author
Share
SHARE

Bungie has had a motion to dismiss a Destiny 2 copyright infringement lawsuit denied by the Eastern District of Louisiana court.

The lawsuit concerns content that’s been ‘vaulted’ – removed from the game – which has created logistical challenges for Bungie in providing evidence.

Plaintiff Matthew Kelsey Martineau previously alleged that Destiny 2’s campaign storylines The Red War and Curse of Osiris copied protected elements of his own published work, including faction and character details that were published on WordPress in 2013 and 2014.

In Bungie’s motion to dismiss the lawsuit, it attached various materials including Destiny 2 gameplay videos from the campaign, information from the wiki Destinypedia, and an affidavit from game director Tyson Green.

Bungie’s argument was that these materials were “accurate reproductions of the accused video campaigns, and the best way for the Court to view them”.

Green said in the affidavit (via The Game Post) that “the ‘Red War’ and ‘Curse of Osiris’ legacy builds can no longer run because their outdated code is incompatible with Destiny 2’s underlying operational framework,” which has evolved since the content was vaulted.

The plaintiff, however, argued that the works themselves should be compared side-by-side, rather than third-party materials like videos and Wiki articles.

The challenge for Bungie is that it ‘vaulted’ both The Red War and Curse of Osiris back in 2020, meaning they’re no longer available to players in the game. Or, to be shown as evidence in a case like this.

The following was stated in the relevant court document: “As Defendant admits in its reply, ‘[t]here is now no feasible way for [Defendant] to provide the Court with a reviewable form of the [Red War or Osiris] campaigns or to produce them should this matter proceed to discovery.'”

“Defendant does not explain how the Court would conduct a side-by-side analysis if it does not have Destiny 2.”

The motion to dismiss was denied as a result. “The Plaintiff has sufficiently alleged the elements of an action for copyright infringement,” said the court.

Bungie has been archiving content from Destiny 2 since 2020, as it prioritised new content that’s been added to the game with subsequent expansions.

You Might Also Like

Assassin’s Creed Shadows fans have a list of features Ubisoft should add next

Dying Light: The Beast delayed for further polish

Former EA exec Adolf Kristjansson appointed Starbreeze CEO

Krafton posts “record-high quarterly sales performance” in Q1 2025

Persona 5: The Phantom X coming to PC and mobile next month

Share This Article
Facebook Copy Link Print
- Advertisement -
Ad image

Contact us

- Advertisement -
Ad image

You Might Also Like

Main

Assassin’s Creed Shadows day one patch detailed, includes destructible shrine changes after concern over copycats

5 Min Read
Main

Outer Worlds 2 is first Xbox Game Studios title to retail at $80

2 Min Read
Main

MindsEye launches with myriad of glitches and issues, as developer promises performance update

3 Min Read
Main

TaleMonster Games raises $7 million in funding

2 Min Read
  • Home
  • About us
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact

© 2025 Gamer Update. All rights reserved.

Gamer Update
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?