Fans of the Disney’s Club Penguin franchise were elated when the shuttered Disney game was resurrected as Club Penguin Rewritten-a fan-made recreation of the popular original. This week, though, their digital dreams were dashed once again when three people were reported arrested in connection with the site’s shuttering for allegedly distributing copyrighted material. This is a sad day for die-hard fans of the classic and newfound fan-made game.
Club Penguin Rewritten was launched in 2017, the same year its father figure shut down. The copycat was developed to mimic the original game as much as possible while also adding new content so that players could continue exploring a delightful world of anthropomorphic penguins. But active players of Club Penguin Rewritten were greeted with a stark black and white message from the City Police of London on the game’s homepage earlier this week: “this site has been taken over by Operation Creative, Police Intellectual Property Crime Unit (PIPCU).”
Detective Constable Daryl Fryatt from the London Police Intellectual Property Crime Unit said in a statement given to a fan blog, “three people were arrested on April 12th on suspicion of distributing materials infringing copyright and searches were carried out. They have been released under investigation and to aid with the police investigation, they agreed to sign over the website to the control of PIPCU.”
More on the Shutdown of the Beloved Game
Administrator Thorn, who runs the imitation game, wrote on its official Discord channel:
After Club Penguin Rewritten was released in 2017, it saw consistent development and growth from users who want to relive their childhood memories of playing the original game, which was officially closed that same year. It seems, however, that growth came with a price tag.
Since Club Penguin Rewritten is based on Disney‘s intellectual property, the placing of advertisements to increase the game’s revenue likely violated the original Disney’s Club Penguin’s copyright. But according to BigChun, ads weren’t placed on Club Penguin Rewritten until the summer of 2020, meaning this investigation and subsequent shutdown didn’t occur for close to two years.
“Of course, running a game like this costs money,” in-game moderator BigChun told Gizmodo. “Therefore ads were placed on certain parts of the game. We, or at least I, assume that’s how Disney got us.”