Lik Sang

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Lik Sang
Pacific Game Technology (Holding) Limited
Lik Sang Logo
Type Defunct
Founded 1998
Headquarters Hong Kong
Key people Pascal Clarysse
Industry Video games, consumer electronics
Products import games, toys, figures, anime-related items, and obscure adapters and controllers for various game platforms.
Slogan Import Games & finest Videogame Accessories
Website http://www.lik-sang.com/

Lik Sang (Traditional Chinese: 力生; Cantonese Yale: lik6 sang1; literal: "powerful and energetic") was a popular distributor of Asian electronics. The company sold import games, toys, figures, anime-related items, and obscure adapters and controllers for various game platforms. Lik Sang has announced that it is closing its doors, as of October 24, 2006, alleging it was the result of multiple lawsuits from Sony.[1]

[edit] History

Lik Sang was established in 1998 in Hong Kong. It became well known for its sales of modchips for game consoles that enabled the normally locked-down consoles to play import and homebrew games (and, as a consequence, pirated games). The "modchips" were not all physical chips; they included devices such as flash cartridges that allow Game Boy users to upload ROMs and homebrew applications onto the device, and play them as if it were a regular gaming cartridge.

In 2002, the company was sued by major game console producers, such as Sony Computer Entertainment, Nintendo, Microsoft, etc., alleging contributory copyright infringement, since the mod chips (and other related devices) enabled playing of pirated game titles on those consoles. The court granted injunctions preventing Lik Sang from selling these devices.[2] After these suits, Lik Sang began expanding its area of expertise by reinventing itself (under a new owner) as a vendor of legitimate, but obscure, accessories, such as consumer electronics, games, merchandise, and t-shirts.

In August of 2005, the company was once again in legal trouble, this time from Sony. Lik Sang had imported PSPs from areas where they were available, and re-exported them to UK customers before the UK release date, which Sony alleged was a breach of their trademark rights.[3] Lik Sang continued shipping PSPs, claiming Hong Kong's laws allow an item to be traded freely once it appears in a market anywhere in the world.

On October 18, 2006, the High Court in London (Patents Court) ruled the shipments were indeed in breach of Sony's rights.[4] The following day, Lik Sang posted a message on their website claiming they had been forced out of business due to Sony's legal action. Sony responded in a statement[5] saying that Lik Sang had not contested the case, thus incurring no legal fees, and had not paid any damages or costs to Sony. However, Lik Sang replied once more that their legal representatives spent over a year to contest the UK's court jurisdiction and tried to defend against Sony's allegations of parallel importation and copyright infringement, and that Sony launched duplicate actions in different countries. According to Lik Sang's final statements[6][7], two different judges expressed their surprise about the high legal expenses claimed by Sony.

As of November 2006, Lik Sang's website is off line and the only page that remains is a letter to former customers about what happened. The Lik Sang forums are also closed down.

Lik Sang is widely known in console gaming circles. Some even form a verb with the name, as in "I could Lik Sang the controller if I had the money", and cult game site Penny Arcade often spoke about Lik Sang and featured them in their webcomics[8].

[edit] References

  1. ^ Lik Sang Announces Out of Business (2006-10-24). Retrieved on 2006-10-24.
  2. ^ Merch, Matt. "Sony, Nintendo and Microsoft vs. Lik Sang", Zeropaid, 2002-10-17. Retrieved on 2006-10-21.
  3. ^ Lik-Sang.com taken to court by Sony for selling PlayStation Portable (Sony PSP). News Archive. Lik Sang (2005-05-08). Retrieved on 2006-10-21.
  4. ^ KK Sony Computer Entertainment & Anor v Pacific Game Technology (Holding) Ltd [2006] EWHC 2509 (Pat) (18 October 2006). British and Irish Legal Information Institute (2006-10-18). Retrieved on 2006-10-30.
  5. ^ Gibson, Ellie. "Sony denies responsibility for closure of Lik-Sang", Gamesindustry.biz, 2006-10-24. Retrieved on 2006-10-24.
  6. ^ Sony Demands $188,000 from Lik-Sang by Nov. 1. GamePro.com (2006-10-27).
  7. ^ Lik-Sang: Setting it straight. PSPUpdates (2006-10-26).
  8. ^ Penny Arcade with Lik Sang - The Insuperable Barrier Of Language. Penny Arcade.

[edit] External links

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