
Falconer for the company and they’re well within their rights to argue that their intellectual property could be harmed if ZeniMax decides to create literary content based on The Elder Scrolls 6.īasically, there could be some mass confusion between people wanting a book on Redfall lore and wondering why the post-apocalypse has so many dragons in it. They’ve got a legal leg to stand on, as Redfall happens to be the name of a series of post-apocalyptic books written by Jay J. That trademark fight means that legally, Bethesda can’t market Elder Scrolls 6 with the Redfall title ( Cheers, Newsweek), which BookBreeze claims belongs to them. A single word, whose ownership can only be disputed as soon as August 2020 thanks to the US courts being rather busy at the moment. Spotted by Youtuber Skullzi TV (Thanks GamesRadar), it looks like ZeniMax Media has a battle on their hands with over the rights to the trademark of “Redfall”, that Bethesda’s daddy company applied for. Or 2020 even, as the best-case scenario for Bethesda’s big-budget RPG could be 2021 thanks to some ongoing litigation.


Officially revealed for several seconds last year at Bethesda’s E3 conference, The Elder Scrolls 6: Check out these Thu’umnails probably won’t see the light of a full release in 2019. Much like a line to ride a vomit comet at an amusement park, there’s going to be a hell of a wait until The Elder Scrolls 6 is finally out and about in the world.
