SILVER SPRING, Md. ā A federal judge has dismissed a lawsuit in which two former University of Maryland menās basketball players accused makers of the āFortniteā video game of misappropriating a dance move that the ex-teammates popularized.
U.S. District Judge Paul Grimm in Maryland ruled Friday that the Copyright Act preempts claims that Jared Nickens and Jaylen Brantley filed in February 2019 against Epic Games Inc., creator of the wildly popular online shooting game.
Nickens and Brantley claimed the Cary, North Carolina-based company misappropriated their identities by digitally copying the āRunning Man Challengeā dance that they performed in social media videos and on āThe Ellen DeGeneres Showā in 2016.
Their copyright infringement lawsuit claimed the āRunning Manā dance āemoteā that Fortnite players can purchase for their characters is identical to the dance that Nickens and Brantley took credit for creating.
The judge said the key question is whether plaintiffs have a claim that is āqualitatively differentā than the rights protected by the Copyright Act.
āAnd here Plaintiffs claim is based on Epic Games allegedly ācapturing and digitally copyingā the Running Man dance to create the Fortnite emote that āallows the playerās avatars to execute the Running Man identically to Plaintiffsā version.āā This is squarely within the rights protected by the Copyright Act,ā he wrote.
Brantley, of Springfield, Mass., and Nickens, of Monmouth Junction, N.J., were seeking more than $5 million in damages.
Epic Games spokesman Nick Chester declined to comment Monday on the judgeās ruling.
Celebratory dances in Fortnite are called āemotes.ā While the game itself is free to play, players can purchase the āemotesā and other character customizations.
Other artists, including Brooklyn-based rapper 2 Milly and āThe Fresh Prince of Bel-Airā star Alfonso Ribeiro, also have sued Epic Games over other dances depicted in the shooting game. Ribeiro dropped his lawsuit against Epic Games last year after the U.S. Copyright Office denied him a copyright for the āCarltonā dance that his character performed on the 1990s sitcom.
Nickens and Brantley appeared on DeGeneresā talk show alongside two New Jersey high school students who were posting videos of the dance online before the two University of Maryland basketball players filmed their own version. Brantley told DeGeneres that Nickens first showed him the dance in a video on Instagram.
āWe dance every day for our teammates in the locker room,ā Brantley said. āWe were like, āHey, letās make a video and make everybody laugh.āā
One of their dance videos has millions of views on Instagram, YouTube and Facebook, their lawsuit said.
The judge dismissed their lawsuitās claims for invasion of privacy, unfair competition and unjust enrichment based on preemption under the Copyright Act. He also threw out their trademark claims and claims accusing the company of unfair competition and āfalse designation of originā under the Lanham Act.
āPlaintiffs seek to place the same square peg into eight round holes in search of a cause of action against Epic Games for its use of the Running Man dance in its game Fortnite. But Plaintiffsā claims that Epic Games copied the dance do not support any of their theories,ā the judge wrote.
Nickens was playing professional basketball in Canada and Brantley was working as a sports agent when they sued last year, according to Richard Jaklitsch, one of their attorneys. Jaklitsch didnāt immediately respond Monday to an email seeking comment.
Michael Kunzelman, The Associated Press