I used a Forgeworld Tarantula turret to convert a Razorback once, posted pics of the paintjob on the web and took it to a Grand Tournament. About 2 years later FW makes new Tarantulas and markets them as Razorback conversion kits.
Did they rip my idea off? I dunno, it would be cool but it makes no difference in the end. They did a lot of work to produce the kits where I simply had a cool idea and showed it off everywhere.
While we\'re on the subject of ripped off ideas I could bring up the fact that I had the idea for anti-skip for portable CD players long before it appeared on the market, but none of the adults I talked to took me seriously. Honestly, that someone would consider rubber shock absorbers to be sufficient anti-skip surprised me even at age 6
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Here\'s a copy of a message I posted on Warseer at the same time as this post. Thought it only fair to post it in both places.
\"I don\'t think you can copyright striding gait bipedalism, nor can you copyright a giant with his mouth open. The pose is similar, but the idea of pudgy giants with bigass clubs is nothing new. The Albion giants were done in this style a long time ago. The date given by Gibbon puts his Giant out at least 3 years after the Giants of Albion were released (1999 is the earliest date I\'ve seen for them, which sounds right to this 5th edition DoW collector). I bet the Albion concepts for those were done a good while in advance, as well. For someone who \"hate those who steals concepts\" he sure does lean heavily on these old figures by Trish Morrison.
The first major difference: the face itself. I\'ve heard a lot of people talk about how similar they are... are you kidding me? The one(s) done by Gibbon is/are definitely Chaotic human style. As someone who has taken courses on primatology, I can\'t even consider the Bedford face to be hominid. It looks to be derived from pongids, to be precise. Pongids are a different family of species from hominids, and the family includes gorillas, orangutans, chimps and (ironically) gibbons
The detailing and style of the giant is totally different as well... one is classic GW concept for clothing and scrap armor. The Gibbon one is highly Nurglesque. The rotting areas look almost identical to the new and old GW Zombie Dragons actually.
The pose is the only thing I consider to be remotely similar, but again it\'s a bloody giant taking a step forward. Seriously. If that\'s all you\'ve got then stop wasting everybody\'s time with another GW-bashing rant.\"
Gibbon says he hadn\'t seen any Dogs of War stuff yet which I didn\'t pick up on the first time around, but still the idea had been around for at least 3 years before his model was done. It\'s not anything new.
I\'ll go to the grave insisting that the pose of the legs is similar, and that\'s about it. Both are great models for sure, but the controversy is IMO unwarranted.
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