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Yesterday β€” 15 December 2025Main stream

Bungie's Marathon will arrive in March

By: Kris Holt
15 December 2025 at 15:43

Bungie’s Marathon has a new release window. The survival extraction shooter was originally set to hit PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X/S and PC in September, but by June, Sony had delayed it indefinitely. Now, with a plagiarism issue largely in the rearview mirror, Bungie has confirmed that Marathon will arrive in March and and plans to sell it for $40.

Alongside the release date and price announcement, Bungie released a 23-minute video that takes a deep dive into the game and shows off the current state of Marathon. New features include proximity chat and a solo mode, while Bungie says it has upgraded the environmental storytelling and visual fidelity. Gritty environments provide a nice contrast to the glossy sci-fi sheen that defined Marathon’s visual language in our earliest looks at the game.

There’s a lot more on deck for Marathon’s first year including new maps and events. Bungie also plans to release more shells, which are akin to character classes that can be customized by changing your loadout. The Rook shell, for instance, is a new one that the studio has added since the alpha playtests. This shell allows you to join a run that's already in progress. You’ll have a limited loadout, but you’re not really risking anything valuable as you run around to loot items.

There’s a lot riding on Marathon. Parent company Sony Interactive Entertainment said last month that Destiny 2 had not lived up to its expectations and it wrote down the value of Bungie’s assets by $204 million. Back in August, Sony asserted more control over Bungie and said the developer was β€œshifting into a role that is becoming more part of PlayStation Studios.”

That’s hardly the only issue Bungie has faced this year. The studio admitted in May that one of its former employees plagiarized the work of artist Fern Hook by enabling it to be used in Marathon’s in-game textures. Earlier this month, Hook said that Bungie and Sony had resolved the matter β€œto my satisfaction.”

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/playstation/bungies-marathon-will-arrive-in-march-200838426.html?src=rss

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Before yesterdayMain stream

Nike Challenges Trademark of Hemp Company Slogan β€˜Just Hemp It’

26 January 2023 at 08:00

Nike is one of the largest footwear and athletic gear companies in the world, known for its familiar slogan β€œJust Do It.” The company recently issued a trademark complaint on Jan. 18 against a Texas-based CBD company called Revive Farming Technologies, who filed to use the trademark β€œJust Hemp It” on Dec. 16, 2019.

β€œJUST DO IT … which has been in use in commerce for more than 30 years, and registered for more than 25 years, is famous within the meaning of Lanham Act Section 43(c), 15 USC Β§ 1125(c),” Nike stated. It is asking the Patent and Trademark Office and Trademark Trial and Appeal Board to deny Revive’s attempt to trademark the phrase β€œJust Hemp It.”

Nike argues that it owns multiple trademark registrations for the β€œJust Do It” mark, describing it as β€œwidely recognized and famous,” and that the Revive should not be allowed to trademark β€œJust Hemp It” because it would lead to confusion and cause injury and damage to Nike.

According to Green Market Report (GMR), Revive already features the phrase on its website followed with a trademark symbol. GMR also states that the website contains language that makes unauthorized medical claims about CBD.

Nike’s β€œJust Do It” campaign first launched in 1988 by the late Dan Wieden, who has successfully launched other slogan campaigns for companies like Old Spice, Procter and Gamble, and Coca Cola. Apparently Wieden said that β€œJust Do It” was inspired by the final words of an inmate on death row, who said β€œYou know, let’s do it” before his execution.

Nike has led successful trademark complaints against other companies attempting to use variations of β€œJust Do It” in the past. In 1992, Nike targeted a company called β€œJust Did It,” which also sold athletic gear, for trademark infringement. In 2020, Nike went after a business for using β€œJust Believe It.” More recently, a small business owner who started a succulent shop called JustSuccIt in 2020, was also contacted by Nike regarding trademark infringement.

This hasn’t been an uncommon trend in the cannabis industry either. In August 2017, the glue company known as Gorilla Glue took Gorilla Glue Strains to court. The results meant that strains known as Gorilla Glue #1 or Gorilla Glue #4 would be referred to as GG1 or GG4.Β 

In February 2018, The Hershey Co. began suing cannabis companies for copyright infringement, and targeted both the Oakland-based Harborside dispensary and a California edibles company called Good Girl Cannabis Co. for selling items with similar Hershey product branding.

UPS targeted cannabis delivery services that were using its acronym, such as United Pot Smokers, UPS420, and THCPlant in February 2019.Β 

Later in August 2019, Sour Patch Kids targeted illegal cannabis products like Stoney Patch for infringing upon the trademark as well. Cinnabon took on a vape company in October 2019 for selling an e-liquid using the brand’s name, just one month before the Center for Disease Control and Prevention discovered that vaping lung injuries were being caused by vitamin E acetate in November 2019.

More recently in August 2022, Mars Wrigley won a lawsuit against cannabis companies using the logo font and colors to sell illegal edibles. β€œI have placed significant weight on the issue of harm not only to the Plaintiff but also to members of the public who might accidentally consume the Defendants’ Infringing Product believing it to be a genuine SKITTLES product. The fact that SKITTLES are a confectionary product that are attractive to children reinforces the need to denounce the Defendants’ conduct,” said Judge Patrick Gleeson in his ruling.

The post Nike Challenges Trademark of Hemp Company Slogan β€˜Just Hemp It’ appeared first on High Times.

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