The real creator of Candy Crush Saga strikes back



Candy Crush Saga is (apparently) a cheat!


We've all played it, we all know how addictive it is and now, we know it is, allegedly, a copycat.


Albert Ransom created a game called Candy Swipe that was originally made in 2010 and bears a striking resemblance to the global phenomenon that is Candy Crush Saga. However, King.com, who make Candy Crush Saga, has now made moves that mean  Ransom will no longer have the rights to his own trademark. This is to prevent them being sued.


The one-man creator of Candy Swipe has published a heartfelt open letter to the makers of Candy Crush Saga, putting it online for all to see and condemn the manner in which his dreams have been crushed like those mulit-coloured sweets.


Albert Ransom originally made the app in memory of his late mother, but the idea only really took off after King.com took the concept and used their size to quash the voice of the smaller company.


Read ahead to find out how. It will put you off your Haribo for sure.


Dear King,


Congratulations! You win! I created my game CandySwipe in memory of my late mother who passed away at an early age of 62 of leukemia. I released CandySwipe in 2010 five months after she passed and I made it because she always liked these sorts of games. In fact, if you beat the full version of the android game, you will still get the message saying "...the game was made in memory of my mother, Layla..." I created this game for warmhearted people like her and to help support my family, wife and two boys 10 and 4. Two years after I released CandySwipe, you released Candy Crush Saga on mobile; the app icon, candy pieces, and even the rewarding, "Sweet!" are nearly identical.




So much so, that I have hundreds of instances of actual confusion from users who think CandySwipe is Candy Crush Saga, or that CandySwipe is a Candy Crush Saga knockoff. So when you attempted to register your trademark in 2012, I opposed it for "likelihood of confusion" (which is within my legal right) given I filed for my registered trademark back in 2010 (two years before Candy Crush Saga existed). Now, after quietly battling this trademark opposition for a year, I have learned that you now want to cancel my CandySwipe trademark so that I don't have the right to use my own game's name. You are able to do this because only within the last month you purchased the rights to a game named Candy Crusher (which is nothing like CandySwipe or even Candy Crush Saga). Good for you, you win. I hope you're happy taking the food out of my family's mouth when CandySwipe clearly existed well before Candy Crush Saga.


It's my livelihood, and you are now attempting to take that away from me. 

I have spent over three years working on this game as an independent app developer. I learned how to code on my own after my mother passed and CandySwipe was my first and most successful game; it's my livelihood, and you are now attempting to take that away from me. You have taken away the possibility of CandySwipe blossoming into what it has the potential of becoming. I have been quiet, not to exploit the situation, hoping that both sides could agree on a peaceful resolution. However, your move to buy a trademark for the sole purpose of getting away with infringing on the CandySwipe trademark and goodwill just sickens me.

This also contradicts your recent quote by Riccardo in "An open letter on intellectual property" posted on your website which states, "We believe in a thriving game development community, and believe that good game developers – both small and large - have every right to protect the hard work they do and the games they create."

I myself was only trying to protect my hard work.

I wanted to take this moment to write you this letter so that you know who I am. Because I now know exactly what you are. Congratulations on your success!

Sincerely,
Albert Ransom
President (Founder), Runsome Apps Inc.




Gemma Clark