Who owns Lord of the Rings Battle for Middle-Earth?

Who owns Lord of the Rings Battle for Middle-Earth?

EA Games

The Lord of the Rings: The Battle for Middle-earth
Developer(s) EA Los Angeles
Publisher(s) EA Games
Director(s) Chris Corry Bing Gordon (creative)
Designer(s) Dustin Browder

What happened to Battle for Middle-Earth 2?

The game was sent to manufacturers on November 15, 2006, and was released on November 28. On January 9, 2011, Electronic Arts announced that the online game servers would be shut down on January 11, 2011 for the Xbox 360 format of the game. The PC version of the game was shut down on December 31, 2010.

Is there any way to play Battle for Middle-Earth 2?

Original publishers EA were forced to switch off the official servers on New Year’s Eve 2010 due to the expiration of their Lord of the Rings videogame licence, but you can still play multiplayer games of BFME 1, 2, and Rise of the Witch-King via the T3A: Online unofficial server.

Will there be a new battle for Middle-Earth?

The Battle for Middle-earth is being completely remade in Unreal 4 engine. The fan team has named the project The Battle For Middle-earth: Reforged and it’s not just a graphical remaster.

Does EA own Lord of the Rings?

In 2005, EA acquired the rights to produce games based on the literary works as well, producing further titles up to the release of The Lord of the Rings: Conquest in 2009, when the licensing agreement expired. Video game rights then passed to Warner Brothers. In 2010, the name was changed to Middle-earth Enterprises.

Is Lord of the Rings still under copyright?

In other words, The Lord of the Rings, authored by a UK author, first published in the UK in May 1954, published in the US five months later, still under copyright in the UK, and in the public domain in the US due to failure to comply with the manufacturing requirements, was restored to copyright in the United States …

Does Disney own The Lord of the Rings?

There’s some gray area in who owns the intellectual rights to Tolkien’s work, as Disney did, in fact, control the movie rights to film The Lord of the Rings through their subsidiary, Miramax.