nECr0MaNCeD wrote:bamabenz wrote:I believe that JR has a contract with USPCC for him to supply design(s). That does not make him an employee.
While I sympathize with RJ, he does not own any IP on the Civil War, just on his artwork and maybe some specific design elements.
In fact, I would not be surprised if RJ's contract with USPCC has specific wording about this sort of thing.
Just saying.
/bama
All very true and I agree but it doesn't make it any less of a dick move on USPCC's part. In they end I doubt they care about the independent designers or collector's. As it has been said before their major business is cranking out decks by the millions for Casinos and retail giants. I see this as a great opportunity for EPCC. It wouldn't be the first time a smaller company put a serious hurting on a larger company by catering to the small groups of disenfranchised customers.
So you think that USPCC shouldn't produce any deck that uses the same theme as one they produced with their custom shop?
Look, this problem occurs in many industries: movies, books, printing, news, etc.
At the end of the day it has to do with what your contract says, and what copyrights, etc you hold.
I'm pretty sure that USPCC would never produce any custom decks if it locked them out of producing decks with the same theme.
And are you sure that Civil Unrest is the first time that USPCC has printed a civil war deck? Or a war deck?
At the end of the day I bet we will look at JR's Civil War deck and compare it to Civil Unrest and the difference will between night and day. The art will be JR's and not RJ's.
This is a non-issue.
/bama