Despite the need for a Judge Dredd structure, our society still demands an outdated legal system with police, firemen, dogcatchers, and lawyers. It just so happens that as our culture evolves so do all of those aforementioned roles.Ars Technicarecently evaluated the rise of the videogame oriented legal firms, detailing two firms that know what publishing and developing are all about and can help sue or defend inside the industry we all love.

One of the examples of new firms dedicated to games is Greenberg Glusker Fields Claman & Machtinger, who recently won a 13 million dollar case for Ubisoft. Apparently, MGM was all up in Ubisoft’s face about publishing games connected to the Bratz brand. Greenberg Glusker showed MGM what was up. This firm got into the business of messing with videogame affairs because they view it as “the future of the entertainment industry.”

Article image

Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & Hampton is another, perhaps more striking example. They have a new entertainment branch consisting of 15-25 people watching the videogames industry. An associate wouldn’t disclose who they have represented, but he indicated that they were doing quite fine.

Videogames are becoming increasingly more financially successful and anything that involves money also involves crazy legal things that I don’t fully understand. What I do know is that Judge Dredd doesn’t need a legal division or even take money for his judgments. Neither does Robocop.

Hell is Us gameplay reveal

Black Ops 6 Season 5 Multiplayer Ransack Mode

Tekken Tag Tournament 2: a black and white Jin and Heihachi stand back-to-back.

PEAK Bing Bong plushie

Silent Hill f: a woman’s face covered in blossoming but deadly looking flowers.

Mei NERF gun in OW2

Battlefield 6 vehicles combat

Several men standing and watching at an explosion in the distance in Battlefield 6.

BO7 key art