Disney Sabacc Lawsuit
Disney Sabacc Lawsuit
Plaintiffs Lucasfilm Ltd. LLC (“Lucasfilm”) and Lucasfilm Entertainment Company Ltd.
Defendants Ren Ventures Ltd. (“Ren Ventures”) and Sabacc Creative Industries Ltd. (“Sabacc
PRELIMINARY STATEMENT
2. Ever since the 1977 release of the blockbuster motion picture Star Wars, fans
have been captivated by the fictional universe created by Plaintiffs. The elements of the Star
Wars universe, including its fanciful characters, extraterrestrial locations, alien creatures,
spaceships, and games, are immensely popular and have come to symbolize Plaintiffs and their
Star Wars franchise in the eyes of the public. These elements have been highlighted in the
numerous Star Wars movies, television series, books, and comic books created over the last four
decades.
3. One element of the Star Wars franchise is “Sabacc,” a fictional card game
that dates back to 1978 and helps frame the Star Wars story. Sabacc plays an important role in
the Star Wars franchise, most notably because it was the means by which the character Han Solo
won his spaceship, the Millennium Falcon, from Lando Calrissian. Fans of Star Wars
understand and acknowledge the significance of Sabacc in the Star Wars franchise, and they
4. Fully aware of these facts, in 2015, Defendants were incorporated on the eve of
the release of the motion picture Star Wars The Force Awakens and released a mobile game app
under the name “Sabacc.” Defendants have named their mobile game app “Sabacc” in order to
create confusion among consumers regarding the connection, authorization, and affiliation
between the Sabacc mobile app and Plaintiffs and their Star Wars franchise. In fact, Plaintiffs
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have no affiliation with Defendants and have not authorized Defendants’ use of Sabacc.
Defendants also intentionally seek to create confusion among the public regarding their product’s
connection to Star Wars through their advertising and promotional materials, which use
Facebook page, and other social media accounts all display copyrighted images from Star Wars
motion pictures and television episodes and quote copyrighted dialogue from these works. Their
social media promotions for the game reference Plaintiffs’ well-known Star Wars trademarks.
They even named one of their companies, Ren Ventures, after the Star Wars The Force Awakens
character Kylo Ren. Finally, Defendants have obtained a federal registration for the mark
SABACC reflecting their intent to, among other things, harm Plaintiffs’ own commercial
consumers about the source of, and Plaintiffs’ sponsorship or endorsement of, Defendants’
products, and infringes on Plaintiffs’ intellectual property rights. Accordingly, Plaintiffs bring
PARTIES
6. Plaintiffs Lucasfilm Ltd. LLC and Lucasfilm Entertainment Company Ltd. LLC
are limited liability companies formed under the laws of California with their principal place of
7. Defendants Ren Ventures and Sabacc Creative are private limited companies
formed under the laws of England and Wales with their principal place of business located in
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8. This is an action for, among other things, trademark infringement and unfair
competition arising under the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1051, et seq., and copyright infringement
arising under the Copyright Act, 17 U.S.C. § 101, et seq. This Court has subject matter
jurisdiction over this action pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331, 1332, and 1338, and 15 U.S.C.
§§ 1116 and 1121. This Court has supplemental jurisdiction over Plaintiffs’ state law claims
pursuant to 28 U.S.C.
§ 1367(a).
9. Venue in this District is appropriate pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1391(b) and (c) and
1400(a).
10. This Court has personal jurisdiction over Defendants Ren Ventures and Sabacc
Creative because they have sold and advertised infringing products through mobile app stores for
Apple and Google as well as interactive websites to consumers in the United States, including in
California, and sought to register and did register the mark SABACC with the United States
INTRADISTRICT ASSIGNMENT
FACTUAL ALLEGATIONS
12. In 1977, Lucasfilm released its blockbuster motion picture Star Wars, later
retitled Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope. This success was followed by the release of Star
Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back (1980); Star Wars Episode VI: Return of the Jedi
(1983); Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace (1999); Star Wars Episode II: Attack of the
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Clones (2002); Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith (2005); Star Wars: The Clone Wars
(2008); Star Wars Episode VII: The Force Awakens (2015); Rogue One: A Star Wars Story
13. Star Wars products and services also have included books since as early as 1980
and television series since 1985. Recent television series include Star Wars: Clone Wars (2008-
2014) and Star Wars Rebels (2014-present), among other television programs.
14. Plaintiffs and certain of their affiliated companies use, or license the use of, the
characters, names, marks, and elements from the Star Wars franchise in connection with mobile
applications, mobile games, card games, board games, computer games, video games, and online
games, as well as a wide variety of other products and merchandise such as toys, books, clothing,
15. One element of the Star Wars franchise is the Sabacc fictional card game.
16. Sabacc is a made-up word coined for the Star Wars franchise. It is an arbitrary
17. Sabacc (hereinafter the “Sabacc Mark” when referring to the name) originated in
a draft screenplay, written in 1978, for the 1980 motion picture Star Wars Episode V: The
Empire Strikes Back. In the screenplay, as Han Solo and Princess Leia hide from the pursuing
forces of the Galactic Empire in their spaceship the Millennium Falcon, Han advises Leia that
they should head for a gas mine that his friend Lando Calrissian won in a “sabacca game.”
“Sabacca” was later changed by Plaintiffs to “Sabacc” in the 1980 novelization of The Empire
Strikes Back, in which Han tells Leia that they can escape the Imperial forces by going to Cloud
City, a mining colony in the Bespin system run by Lando. “A Tibanna gas mine,” Han adds.
18. Plaintiffs’ Sabacc Mark next appeared in a trilogy of novels about Lando
Calrissian published in 1983. The first of these, Lando Calrissian and the Mindharp of Sharu,
explains the unique rules of the Sabacc game. The Sabacc deck comprises a number of face
cards (including the Idiot, the Evil One, and the Star) and four suits of fifteen pip cards (Flasks,
Sabers, Staves, and Coins). It is a betting game in which the goal is to finish with a hand as close
as possible to positive or negative 23 without going over. At various intervals, the cards in a
player’s hand change at random (the “Sabacc shift”) unless they are placed in an “interference
field” that reveals their value to the other players. The only hand that defeats a hand of positive
or negative 23 (“Pure Sabacc”) is a hand comprising the Idiot, a 2 card, and a 3 card (the “Idiot’s
Array”). The trilogy of novels also tells the story of how Lando Calrissian lost his spaceship, the
Millennium Falcon, to Han Solo in a game of Sabacc. The Millennium Falcon is the most
significant and prominently featured spaceship in the original Star Wars trilogy of motion
pictures and, consequently, the works that make up the Star Wars franchise have repeatedly
19. Plaintiffs have used the Sabacc Mark in commerce, including as the name of an
element of Star Wars entertainment products. Dozens of Star Wars products created or licensed
by Plaintiffs have used the Sabacc Mark. In the decades since the coining of “Sabacc” and
continuing to the present day, Plaintiffs’ and their licensees have used the Sabacc Mark on or in
connection with card games, mobile games, video games, magazines, comic books, novels,
television episodes, a live theme park experience, and a major motion picture. Representative
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1
The characters on the front of the product are part of the Star Wars fictional language Aurebesh and translate in
English to SABACC.
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Star Wars Rebels episode “Idiot’s Array” television series (Jan. 2015):
protectable trademark. Moreover, as a result of the long and extensive use of the Sabacc Mark
by Plaintiffs and their licensees, the Sabacc Mark has long been recognized by the public as
21. The timing of Defendants’ formation and subsequent use of the Sabacc Mark
indicates their intent to infringe Plaintiffs’ rights and to create confusion among consumers
regarding the source of their Sabacc mobile app. Prior to Defendants’ claimed “first use” of the
mark SABACC, in 2015, Plaintiffs publicly announced that Lucasfilm was developing a new
motion picture focused on Han Solo as a young man. Star Wars fans and any interested observer
would expect that the pivotal game of Sabacc between Lando and Han would be part of the new
movie. In fact, fans soon began to speculate about whether the movie would feature Sabacc. In
an article on io9/Gizmodo reporting that “The Han Solo Movie Will Include a Young Lando
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Calrissian,” the author remarked that “[w]e know Han and Lando have a long history and that
Lando lost the Falcon to Han in a sabacc game,” and that she “want[ed] to see that game so
badly.”2 Newsweek, too, reported that “Han won the Falcon in a card game called Sabacc in
Cloud City, but further details have yet to be given in the film.”3
22. The Sabacc Mark has been the subject of additional unsolicited media coverage.
For example, in an article about Star Wars Episode VII: The Force Awakens, the online
publication The Verge remarked that “Director J.J. Abrams [wa]s keeping his sabacc cards close
to his chest.”4 And in an article entitled “Pure Sabacc wins again,” entertainment website The
A.V. Club listed “Sabacc [from] Star Wars” as one of the top “fictitious pop-culture games with
convoluted rules.”5
23. In addition to the Sabacc Mark, Plaintiffs own trademarks including common law
rights, trade names, registrations, and registration applications that incorporate or are comprised
of distinctive elements from and associated with Plaintiffs’ motion pictures, television programs,
and other products (together with the Sabacc Mark, the “Lucasfilm Trademarks”). These include
well-known character names and images, the names of groups and organizations and their
identifying elements, spaceship names and images, and location names and images from the Star
Wars franchise, such as Lando Calrissian, Han Solo, Yoda, Chewbacca, C-3PO, Kylo Ren, Zeb,
the Bothans, the Trade Federation (and its Viceroy), the Millennium Falcon, and Cloud City.
24. Each of these elements of the Star Wars universe has been used repeatedly in
connection with motion pictures, television series, publications, games, toys, and other
2
https://io9.gizmodo.com/report-the-han-solo-movie-will-include-a-young-lando-c-1785174914
3
http://www.newsweek.com/han-solo-star-wars-lando-chewbacca-670569
4
https://www.theverge.com/2015/4/17/8439411/star-wars-episode-vii-force-awakens-resistance-first-order
5
https://www.avclub.com/pure-sabacc-wins-again-22-plus-fictitious-pop-culture-1798228852
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merchandise created or authorized by Plaintiffs. Each of them is inherently distinctive and each
25. The Lucasfilm Trademarks also include registered marks, such as the Star Wars
name and logo and the name of the character Kylo Ren, who is the primary antagonist in the
motion picture Star Wars Episode VII: The Force Awakens. Copies of the registration
certificates for these marks (the “Lucasfilm Registered Marks”) are attached as Appendix B.
D. Lucasfilm’s Copyrights
26. Lucasfilm owns copyrights in the creative works constituting the Star Wars
franchise (the “Lucasfilm Copyrights”). These include, but are not limited to, the following
works infringed by Defendants: (a) the motion picture Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope; (b)
the motion picture Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back; (c) the motion picture Star
Wars Episode VII: The Force Awakens; (d) the episode “Idiot’s Array” from the television series
Star Wars Rebels; (e) the character Han Solo; and (f) the character Lando Calrissian.
27. The Lucasfilm Copyrights are covered by one or more registrations with the U.S.
Copyright Office. These registrations include, but are not limited to, the following: PA 72-282,
28. Defendants Ren Ventures and Sabacc Creative advertise, market, promote,
produce, offer for distribution, and distribute a mobile game app under the infringing name
Sabacc, which allows users to play an online card game as a single player or against others (the
“Infringing Sabacc App”). Defendants distribute the app to consumers for free through the
Apple App Store and Google Play store, but monetize it through “in-app purchases” or
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29. The Infringing Sabacc App prominently displays the Sabacc Mark. It is titled
“Sabacc – The High Stakes Card Game” in mobile app stores and is advertised with sample
images that display the Sabacc Mark in bright, capitalized text and as part of a logo. Once
downloaded, the app appears on mobile devices with the designation “Sabacc.” Opening the app
causes it to display several logos with the Sabacc Mark. Representative images of the Infringing
Sabacc App are shown in Appendix C. Representative images of the Infringing Sabacc App
30. The Infringing Sabacc App page in the Apple app store shown above makes
repeated references to events, places, and well-known phrases from the Star Wars franchise such
as: (a) “From a Cantina far, far away to your mobile device, welcome to the world’s largest
Sabacc site.”; (b) “[B]ecome a Cloud City legend!”; (c) “Go bust? Don’t worry, we won’t take
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31. The Infringing Sabacc App page states “© Sabacc trademark used under license.”
This text falsely suggests that Sabacc Creative is licensing the Sabacc Mark from Plaintiffs and
not from its own affiliated company that does not have any rights to the Sabacc Mark.
32. The Infringing Sabacc App mimics the fictional Sabacc game from Plaintiffs’
Star Wars franchise as well as the physical Sabacc card games previously licensed and
authorized by Plaintiffs. The names and values of the suits (Coins, Flasks, Sabres, Staves), face
cards (e.g., the Evil One, the Star), and hands (e.g., Pure Sabacc, Idiot’s Array) are identical; the
goal is identical, i.e., to finish with as close as possible to positive or negative 23 without going
over; and the mobile app includes the Star Wars-created “Sabacc shift,” where the cards in the
player’s hand occasionally changes unless they are placed in the “interference field.” There can
be no question that Defendants’ mobile game is intended to, and does, copy and appropriate
Plaintiffs’ Sabacc game in order to capitalize on the goodwill of the Sabacc Mark and the Star
Wars franchise.
33. Defendants prominently display the Sabacc Mark on the Sabacc Creative website
advertising and offering the Infringing Sabacc App (www.sabacccreativecom), Facebook page
lines from Lucasfilm’s copyrighted motion pictures, display images of copyrighted and
trademark-protected characters from the Star Wars movies, television series and books, and
display the Lucasfilm Marks. Examples of such infringements are listed below and attached in
Appendix C:
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as “the social card game popularized by the Star Wars universe, and the means by
which Han Solo won the Millennium Falcon from Lando.”
b. Defendants’ Facebook and Twitter pages display, among other things, images
from Star Wars Episode VII: The Force Awakens (stills of Kylo Ren, with the
caption “Kylo approves”); Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back (stills
of Lando Calrissian and Yoda, along with paraphrased or quoted lines from that
motion picture); and Star Wars Rebels (stills of the character Zeb losing a game of
Sabacc to Lando Calrissian), as well as the Star Wars logo, repeated references to
“Star Wars,” an illustration of Lando wagering the Millennium Falcon, and other
quotations from the motion pictures (“May the Force be with you,” and “Many
Bothans died to bring [you] this information.”).
34. Defendants have issued online press releases that make repeated references to the
Star Wars franchise and expressly identify Sabacc as the card game of the “Star Wars universe.”
Defendants’ principal has styled himself in one press release as “Viceroy of the Trade
Federation’s gaming guild,” which is a reference to a character and a fictional political entity
from the prequel trilogy of Star Wars motion pictures. Defendants, moreover, timed their
product launch to coincide with the release of Rogue One: A Star Wars Story, publicizing for
example, “with new life being pumped into the franchise and characters from a galaxy far, far,
away interest in the ways of the Force has never been stronger.” They titled a subsequent release
“Major update for Sabacc, the Card Game of the Star Ward (sic) Universe.”
35. Ren Ventures obtained a federal registration for the mark Sabacc on August 23,
2016 (No. 5,025,710), falsely representing to the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office that it has
ownership rights in the Sabacc Mark and claiming a priority date of November 20, 2015. This
date is well after Plaintiffs established senior rights to the Sabacc Mark. Ren Ventures’
registration claims supposed rights to the mark Sabacc across a vast array of goods in Class 9
(covering cinematographic and photographic devices) (including all types of electronic games,
computer and video game cartridges, and video recordings featuring computer games), and Class
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41 (covering entertainment services). Plaintiffs have filed a petition to cancel the Sabacc
37. Plaintiffs have served Defendants with multiple notices to cease their
unauthorized activities, and have petitioned to cancel Ren Ventures’ purported trademark
38. Defendants have refused to cease their unauthorized acts, and, unless enjoined by
39. Defendants’ infringing conduct was and continues to be intentional and willful.
COUNT ONE
COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT
(17 U.S.C. § 501)
40. Plaintiffs repeat and reallege the allegations above as if fully set forth herein.
41. Lucasfilm owns all right, title, and interest in and to the Lucasfilm Copyrights,
and Lucasfilm has complied in all respects with the provisions of the Copyright Act of 1976, and
holds valid copyright registrations covering these works, including PA 72-282, PA 172-810, PA
U.S.C. § 504(c)(2).
44. Defendants’ conduct has injured Lucasfilm and has caused and will continue to
cause irreparable injury to Lucasfilm for which Lucasfilm has no adequate remedy at law.
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COUNT TWO
INFRINGEMENT OF FEDERALLY REGISTERED TRADEMARKS
(15 U.S.C. § 1114)
45. Plaintiffs repeat and reallege the allegations above in paragraphs 1 through 43 as
46. Plaintiffs are the exclusive owners of the Lucasfilm Registered Marks. Each of
the trademark registrations relating to the Lucasfilm Registered Marks is in full force and effect.
connection with the sale, offering for sale, distribution, and/or advertising of their services and
products. Defendants’ uses are likely to cause confusion, mistake, and/or deception among
consumers by creating the false and misleading impression that Plaintiffs endorsed, supported,
their products, to the damage of Plaintiffs’ reputation, goodwill, and sales. Defendants are
therefore liable to Plaintiffs for infringement of the Registered Marks pursuant to 15 U.S.C.
§ 1114.
Lucasfilm Registered Marks, without Plaintiffs’ consent or authorization, was and continues to
be intentional and willful within the meaning of 15 U.S.C. § 1114 and § 1117.
49. Defendants’ conduct has injured Plaintiffs and has caused and will continue to
cause irreparable injury to Plaintiffs for which Plaintiffs have no adequate remedy at law.
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COUNT THREE
TRADEMARK INFRINGEMENT
(15 U.S.C. § 1125(a))
50. Plaintiffs repeat and reallege the allegations above in paragraphs 1 through 39 as
51. The Lucasfilm Trademarks (including the Sabacc Mark) and the goodwill
associated with them are of great and incalculable value, are highly and inherently distinctive,
and have become associated with Plaintiffs’ products and services, which are of the highest
reproductions, copies, and colorable imitations of the Lucasfilm Trademarks (including the
Sabacc Mark) in connection with the sale, offering for sale, distribution, and advertising of their
services and products and in Defendants’ domain name, social media names, and trade names.
Defendants’ uses are likely to cause confusion, mistake, and deception among consumers by
creating the false and misleading impression that Plaintiffs endorsed, supported, sponsored,
products, to the damage of Plaintiffs’ reputation, goodwill, and sales. Defendants are therefore
liable to Plaintiffs for infringement of the Lucasfilm Trademarks (including the Sabacc Mark)
53. Defendants’ acts complained of herein are willful and intentional within the
meaning of 15 U.S.C. § 1114 and § 1117, and Defendants continue to be engaged in them with
the intention of trading upon the valuable goodwill associated with the Lucasfilm Trademarks
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54. Defendants’ conduct has injured Plaintiffs and has caused and will continue to
cause irreparable injury to Plaintiffs for which Plaintiffs have no adequate remedy at law.
COUNT FOUR
CANCELLATION OF REGISTRATIONS
(15 U.S.C. §§ 1119, 1052(d))
55. Plaintiffs repeat and reallege the allegations above in paragraphs 1 through 39 as
56. Plaintiffs are the rightful owner of the Sabacc Mark. The Sabacc Mark is of great
and incalculable value, is highly and inherently distinctive, and has long been associated in the
57. Ren Ventures has registered a trademark in the United States Patent and
Trademark Office, Registration No. 5,025,710, which is identical to the Sabacc Mark without
Plaintiffs have prior rights to the Sabacc Mark, including based on Plaintiffs’ use of the Sabacc
Mark for decades, including well before Defendants’ purported priority date of November 20,
2015.
58. The trademark derived from the Sabacc Mark that Ren Ventures registered is used
to misrepresent the source of the products sold in connection therewith and is likely to cause
confusion, mistake, and deception among consumers by creating the false and misleading
impression that Plaintiffs are the source of Defendants’ Sabacc game; that Plaintiffs have
endorsed, supported, sponsored, or approved Defendants’ Sabacc games; or that Defendants and
their Sabacc game are affiliated, connected, or otherwise associated with Plaintiffs or their Star
Wars franchise.
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59. Plaintiffs seek cancellation of Ren Ventures’ Registration No. 5,025,710 for the
COUNT FIVE
UNFAIR COMPETITION
(15 U.S.C. § 1125(a))
60. Plaintiffs repeat and reallege the allegations above in paragraphs 1 through 39 as
61. In connection with the sale, offering for sale, distribution, and advertising of their
services and products, Defendants have used and continue to use elements of the Star Wars
franchise (including without limitation the Sabacc Mark), including by displaying and referring
to characters, events, places, organizations, words, and phrases from the Star Wars universe that
are well-known and have long been associated in the public mind with Plaintiffs’ products and
services.
62. Defendants’ uses of these elements from the Star Wars franchise are likely to
cause confusion, mistake, and deception among consumers by creating the false and misleading
Plaintiffs’ reputation, goodwill, and sales. Defendants are therefore liable to Plaintiffs for unfair
63. Defendants’ conduct has injured Plaintiffs and has caused and will continue to
cause irreparable injury to Plaintiffs for which Plaintiffs have no adequate remedy at law.
COUNT SIX
COMMON LAW TRADEMARK INFRINGEMENT
64. Plaintiffs repeat and reallege the allegations above in paragraphs 1 through 39 as
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65. Plaintiffs own all rights, title, and interest in and to the Lucasfilm Trademarks
(including the Sabacc mark) as aforesaid, including all common law rights in such marks.
67. Defendants intend to continue their willfully infringing acts unless restrained by
this Court.
68. Defendants’ conduct has injured Plaintiffs and has caused and will continue to
cause irreparable injury to Plaintiffs for which Plaintiffs have no adequate remedy at law. In
addition, Defendants are guilty of oppression, fraud, and malice within the meaning of Cal. Civ.
Code § 3294.
COUNT SEVEN
COMMON LAW UNFAIR COMPETITION
69. Plaintiffs repeat and reallege the allegations above in paragraphs 1 through 39 as
70. The aforesaid acts of Defendants constitute unfair competition in violation of the
common law of the State of California by attempting to “pass off” Defendants’ mobile game
71. Defendants intend to continue their unfair and willfully infringing acts unless
72. Defendants’ conduct has injured Plaintiffs and has caused and will continue to
cause irreparable injury to Plaintiffs for which Plaintiffs have no adequate remedy at law. In
addition, Defendants are guilty of oppression, fraud, and malice within the meaning of Cal. Civ.
Code § 3294.
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COUNT EIGHT
CALIFORNIA UNFAIR COMPETITION LAW
(CAL. BUS. & PROF. CODE § 17200 et seq.)
73. Plaintiffs repeat and reallege the allegations above in paragraphs 1 through 39 as
74. California Business and Professions Code § 17200 et seq. prohibits unfair
competition in the form of any unlawful, unfair, or fraudulent business acts or practices.
75. Defendants engage in conduct that is unlawful, unfair, and fraudulent by, among
other things, competing in the marketplace on unfair terms and misleading its customers into
believing they are playing a mobile game endorsed, supported, sponsored, or approved by, or
76. This conduct is “unlawful” because it violates the Lanham Act and the common
77. This conduct is “unfair” and “fraudulent” in that it is likely to deceive customers
into believing that Plaintiffs endorsed, supported, sponsored, approved, or were affiliated,
78. Defendants intend to continue their unlawful, unfair, and fraudulent acts unless
restrained by this Court. Defendants’ conduct has caused and is causing actual harm to
Plaintiffs, including the loss of money and property, such as the cost of litigating their
cancellation petition and the loss of opportunities to license the Sabacc Mark. In addition,
Defendants’ conduct has caused and will continue to cause irreparable injury to Plaintiffs, for
79. Defendants’ conduct entitles Plaintiffs to equitable relief under Business and
Professions Code §17203, including restitution, disgorgement of profits, and injunctive relief.
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80. Attorneys’ fees are appropriate pursuant to California Code of Civil Procedure
WHEREFORE, Plaintiffs respectfully pray that the Court enter judgment in their favor
servants, employees, attorneys, and all those in active concert or participation with them from:
Lucasfilm Copyrights and other copyrights, whether now in existence or later created, including
without limitation by reproducing or publicly displaying these copyrighted works or selling any
products bearing or consisting of copies these works, except pursuant to a lawful license or with
2. Using the Lucasfilm Trademarks, including the Sabacc Mark and the
Lucasfilm Registered Marks, or any reproduction, counterfeit, copy, or colorable imitation of the
activity that suggests that Defendants or their business are in any way affiliated with, approved,
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names, or other identifiers that are confusingly similar to Plaintiffs’ trademarks in the Star Wars
franchise;
using any other entities or devices for the purpose of circumventing or otherwise avoiding the
the sale, offering for sale, distribution, or advertising of Defendants’ services and products;
C. Directing that Defendants deliver for destruction any and all infringing
merchandise in their possession or under their control bearing any of the Lucasfilm Trademarks
profits pursuant as a result of Defendants’ willful and intentional violations of the Lanham Act;
Defendants’ violations of the Copyright Act or, alternatively, at Lucasfilm’s election, such
statutory damages as may be proper, up to the maximum of $150,000 for each work that
J. Awarding Plaintiffs such other and further relief as the Court deems just and
proper.
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