I admit I'm not familiar with how work for hire contracts work in Japan, but it just strikes me as weird that they could write Transformers manga and that they or their publishers would own original creations made for the licence they're working on.
Like I'm pretty sure Hasbro owns Rung, not James Roberts or IDW.
True, not in the normal scheme of things, but even human characters could still be on the table for a Haslab or some such similar special edition release.Most of them are also human or otherwise not Transformers or even robots, and so wouldn't warrant getting toys anyway.
The thing is, it's far more about Hasbro's risk aversion (and time efficiency) than about cost-aversion. Hasbro doesn't want to take the time to look into finding out who owns, and ultimately buy, these characters. If they don't know that they already own them, they're going to just move on. It could be that the rightsholders would gladly give the rights away, but Hasbro's never going to have investigated to learn such to be the case. They'll simply move on rather than take the time or the risk.I've been pondering this idea of Hasbro/TakaraTomy not owning the manga-only characters, and I have to wonder, are the owners of these characters currently making anything off of them?
Like, granted, most of them are characters so obscure, they were not super-likely to get a figure made any time soon, but how much would it really cost to buy the characters outright so they are at least part of the stable of available characters when Hasbro or Takara wants to do a deep cut (Such as Solon or King Solon with Haslab Deathsaurus)?
Not to mention the fact that Hasbro never even bothered to get back the rights to the 2001 Robots in Disguise cartoon from Disney. If they aren't gonna bother with something like a mainstream series that was the face of the Transformers brand for its time, chances are even less likely that they would pursue the rights for mostly human characters from a relatively obscure Japanese manga series that barely anyone in Hasbro's English-speaking market has ever read or even likes all that much (as those old TV Magazine JG1 manga series are pretty juvenile in their writing style, aimed primarily at Kindergarten-aged readers).The thing is, it's far more about Hasbro's risk aversion (and time efficiency) than about cost-aversion. Hasbro doesn't want to take the time to look into finding out who owns, and ultimately buy, these characters. If they don't know that they already own them, they're going to just move on. It could be that the rightsholders would gladly give the rights away, but Hasbro's never going to have investigated to learn such to be the case. They'll simply move on rather than take the time or the risk.
Related to that, Disney may not even care or know they own RiD. They bought out Saban Entertainment- the original rights holders- for Power Rangers and Saban bought his IP back specifically for Power Rangers, which is why RiD wasn't included in that deal.Not to mention the fact that Hasbro never even bothered to get back the rights to the 2001 Robots in Disguise cartoon from Disney.
Night Dive Studios (who are the kinds of the classic FPS remaster) was looking at doing NOLF, and version of that game made to run on modern systems would be great. Sadly that ain't gonna happen. At least not until Disney buys Warner Bros and merges with Microsoft.Hoist the sails and see who cares enough to complain.
Actually, there might be a new wrinkle to that which has recently emerged.There are a number of JG1 characters from the Victory manga I'd love to have but Hasbro's never going to bother with that headache, even if the actual rights holders are unaware they're actually rights holders.
Corporate legal departments are all about reducing legal headaches, even ones that have a high likelihood of not happening.
Related to that, Disney may not even care or know they own RiD. They bought out Saban Entertainment- the original rights holders- for Power Rangers and Saban bought his IP back specifically for Power Rangers, which is why RiD wasn't included in that deal.
Hasbro could call Disney up tomorrow to ask what Disney's asking price would be about RiD and Disney would go "we own that?"
Which makes the whole thing extra frustrating. Between Hasbro being super cautious and Disney not even knowing what they have and likely not caring, RiD is forever going to stick in a weird limbo. The show, anyway.
And then We've got swallowed by FuRyu in 2019.But not RiD as far as anyone knows. If RiD lapsed the same way Digimon did (and I'm sure Disney hasn't actively renewed it), it could have just reverted to We've.
Technically Hasbro even had the license for Digimon for a while, but they let it lapse without ever having done anything with it.
Trademarks and copyrights are different. Trademarks have to be actively used and/or renewed, or someone else can use the mark (usually a name or logo). Copyrights last a long time without need for attention.Yeah, they got back (and Hasbro now owns) most of their live-action shows (including Ninja Turtles: The Next Mutation) and a couple animated ones.
Technically Hasbro even had the license for Digimon for a while, but they let it lapse without ever having done anything with it.
But not RiD as far as anyone knows. If RiD lapsed the same way Digimon did (and I'm sure Disney hasn't actively renewed it), it could have just reverted to We've.