A legal battle between Microsoft and a French video game publisher appears to be holding up the development of a mobile version of Halo, the popular Xbox game.
In-Fusio agreed to make four payments to Microsoft of $500,000 for the exclusive rights to develop the mobile game, according to its complaint. Its designs were subject to Microsoft's approval, but terms of the contract meant that Microsoft couldn't reject its proposals without reasonable grounds.
The French company says it submitted several game designs to Microsoft last year. Microsoft didn't respond to the proposals in a timely way, and then turned them down without any helpful feedback that would have allowed In-Fusio to redesign them, the lawsuit said.
At one point Microsoft suspended the royalty payments, and then in September last year it demanded a payment of $500,000, according to the suit. In-Fusio refused to pay on the grounds that Microsoft hadn't abided by the contract and was denying In-Fusio any chance to benefit from it.
In November, Microsoft sent a letter accusing the company of breach of contract and threatening to terminate the agreement if the French company didn't pay the latest royalty installment, according to the lawsuit. In-Fusio then took the matter to court, filing a breach of contract lawsuit on December 19 in the US District Court for the Western District of Washington, in Seattle. In-Fusio is seeking a judgment that it has exclusive rights to develop the mobile version of Halo and unspecified damages.
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