Hyper Front APK download and size
Image via Netease

Riot Games sues developers of FPS title Hyper Front over content stolen from Valorant

Does Riot Games have a case?

Riot Games is part of another lawsuit, this time the company is suing Chinese company NetEase over the game Hyper Front, citing the title as a clone of Valorant. According to Riot Games, there are multiple similarities between the two titles, claiming Hyper Front has copied “substantial parts” of the characters, maps, weapons, weapon skins, and even specific stats from Valorant.

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Polygon reports that Riot Games is bringing the case to courts in the United Kingdom, Germany, Brazil, and Singapore. Polygon claims that Riot Games is taking the suite to multiple courts because laws are different across the world, and the company doesn’t want to rely on one court to resolve the issue. Riot Games intends to use the courts to force NetEase to shut down Hyper Front and for “substantial” damages.

Related: Xbox Game Pass integration with Riot Games is right around the corner, gives unique benefits in Valorant, TFT, and more

Valorant and Hyper Front are free-to-play first-person shooters that use stylized graphics where teams of five players face each other in various modes. Hyper Front is not available in the U.S. and is only available on mobile, whereas Valorant is available in the U.S. and a mobile version is coming later. While shooters are a dime a dozen in the present gaming landscape, with five-on-five being a popular format within the shooter genre, when compared side-by-side with each other, Hyper Front does have more than a passing resemblance to Valorant. Several character designs in Hyper Front match some of the characters from Valorant.

This isn’t the first time Riot Games had to sue another company for infringing on its intellectual property. Riot Games accused Vietnamese studio Imba Network’s I Am Hero: AFK Tactical Teamfight of stealing character likenesses and background stories from Teamfight Tactics. Riot Games’ parent company Tencent won a $2.9 million case against Moonton for copying League of Legends to make Mobile Legends.


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Misael Duran
Freelance Writer who's been working with the Gamurs Group since 2019. I have over six years' worth of experience in Journalism and video game writing, having worked for sites like TheGamer, CBR, Pro Game Guides, and IGN.