We have covered all about the lessons we can learn from the recently concluded Mobile Legends M2 Championship.
Riot Games has filed a lawsuit against Moonton Games for copyright infringement for copying parts of its game League of Legends.
Uh.... Thats what developers do. When a game sells big, devs mimic it for quick profits. Look at Super Smash Bros., PlayStation All-stars Battle Royale, Nickelodeon's fighter, and now Warner Bros version. Theyre all the same thing..... Look at the games copying Counterstrike, and Doom. Come on people.....
From Xfire: "MOBAs might not have gotten their start on mobile platforms, but it's clear that the genre was built to be played on the go.
The ability to go in for a quick match whenever and wherever is what has led to the numerous mobile MOBA games that are currently out on the market today. But, because there are so many to choose from, newcomers to the genre might not know which one to play and why a particular game is worth playing."
Xfire writes "Multiplayer Online Battle Arenas (or MOBAs) used to be the sole realm of desktops. Ever since the original Defense of the Ancients (DoTA) user created mod opened up the floodgates, the MOBA scene has never looked back. It even managed to grab the attention away from the Multiplayer FPS king, Countersrike.
Today, the 5 vs. 5 team MOBAs are the eSports poster children. LAN parties and big money tournaments alike are built on them.
Until recently, the mobile MOBA had one undisputed champ: Moonton’s Mobile Legends: Bang Bang (aka Mobile Legends). But in 2020, that crown has a new challenger, which is Riot Games’ League of Legends: Wild Rift (or just Wild Rift)."