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EntertainmentGamingPlayStationSonyTech

Sony and Tencent reach settlement over Horizon-style game

Light of Motiram disappears following Sony and Tencent settlement.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Dec 19, 2025, 7:08 AM EST
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A promotional image poster of Horizon Zero Dawn Remastered
Image: Guerrilla Games / Sony Interactive Entertainment (SIE)
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Sony and Tencent have quietly ended a months-long legal drama over a game that critics said looked a little too much like PlayStation’s flagship series. In filings made this week, the companies told a California federal court they’d reached a confidential settlement and asked the judge to dismiss the case “with prejudice,” closing the dispute so it can’t be refiled on the same claims.

The fight began in late July, when Sony Interactive Entertainment sued Tencent and several of its subsidiaries in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California. Sony’s complaint accused the developer of producing a “slavish” imitation of Guerrilla Games’ Horizon series in the form of Light of Motiram, pointing to allegedly copied audiovisual elements, character designs and marketing that Sony said risked consumer confusion.

The contested title first exploded into public view in late 2024, after trailers and promotional screenshots of Light of Motiram made the rounds on social media and in fan communities. Players noticed obvious echoes of Horizon’s visual DNA: overgrown ruins, tribal-style outfits, and towering, animal-like machines that moved and fought like Horizon’s mechanical fauna. That early buzz — a mix of curiosity and criticism — is what put the game squarely on Sony’s radar.

As scrutiny intensified, Tencent quietly edited the game’s store pages: the company pulled some promotional images and rewrote descriptions that had previously leaned heavily on language about a “world overrun by machines.” Those adjustments didn’t prevent the lawsuit, but they did shape the public narrative — and gave Sony more material to argue that the resemblance went beyond generic inspiration.

For weeks, the two sides jockeyed around a preliminary injunction hearing Sony had hoped would quickly stop Light of Motiram’s rollout. Instead of a courtroom finale, the process slowed: the parties agreed to pause some public testing and marketing, and they delayed key hearing dates while negotiations continued behind closed doors. That slower timetable mattered; it allowed both companies to avoid an all-or-nothing fight in open court.

The settlement itself is, as the companies put it, confidential — and that’s exactly the point. Publicly, Tencent’s Americas communications head offered only a short joint statement saying the firms were “pleased to have reached a confidential resolution” and would make no further comment, while expressing a desire to keep working together in other areas. Sony declined to expand on the terms.

The most visible consequence so far is practical: Light of Motiram has been delisted from Steam and the Epic Games Store, and its storefront presence has largely evaporated from major PC marketplaces, even though the game’s own website still links to those stores. That disappearance, combined with the closed-door settlement, leaves the project’s future uncertain — industry reporting suggests it’s unlikely to launch in its previous form any time soon, if ever.

Beyond the headlines and storefront takedowns, the case matters because it tests where the industry draws the line between homage and theft. Big publishers increasingly treat the visual and mechanical details of tentpole franchises as protectable parts of their brand identities; Horizon is no exception, having become a multi-platform franchise with sequels and a Netflix adaptation in development. For Sony, litigating was as much about defending that cultivated identity as it was about one game.

For Tencent, the benefits of a quiet settlement are clear: a confidential resolution avoids a public loss that could create legal precedent in the U.S., and it preserves working ties with a major platform partner. The broader takeaway for developers is blunt: borrowing the “feel” of a hit is a fraught strategy when art direction, character design and promotional framing start to read like a brand-level imitation rather than a stylistic nod.

Legally, the dismissal with prejudice is the clearest formal signal — it ends the dispute in court, but it doesn’t tell us what was exchanged to get there. Confidential settlements can include changes ranging from licensing payments and reworking obligations to quiet agreements about rebranding or redistribution controls; without the papers, readers and players are left to infer likely outcomes from what’s visible: a pulled store page and a closed case.

What happens next for Light of Motiram — retooling, rebrand, or indefinite shelving — is largely guesswork for now. The broader effect, though, is already in motion: studios and publishers will likely watch this episode as a reminder that inspiration has legal limits, and that the court of public opinion can quickly amplify disputes into regulatory and contractual battlegrounds. For players, the story is a quiet but emphatic note that cultural borrowing in games is increasingly policed not just by fans, but by lawyers and corporate strategy teams.

Even as the filing closes the book on this particular chapter, it raises familiar questions about how creative industries protect what they see as the soul of their franchises. When visual language, gameplay and promotional voice congeal into something recognizable — and profitable — the impulse to defend those assets grows. Whether that defense promotes originality or chills creative riffing is a debate that game-makers, players and courts are only beginning to have in earnest.

If you’re watching for a comeback from Light of Motiram, the safe bet is patience. The legal page is closed; the commercial page has been reset. What remains is a reminder that, in a crowded market of hits and imitators, the next big dispute could start the moment a trailer looks just a little too familiar.


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