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번역 관련 문제 보고
if you want it, get it on gee too ayy
Note that last sentence. A huge part of why Activision Blizzard won that lawsuit is because Humvees are featured in Call of Duty to enhance realism (after all, Call of Duty takes place in our world) but they are not a central focus of the games. As The Verge put it,[www.theverge.com] they "serve a purpose beyond simply trading on the Humvee brand." The Humvee trademark was not central to the games.
The same cannot be said for Ace Combat, where the aircraft are center stage. A lot of the aircraft 3D designs and their names ("Raptor", "Black Widow", "Lightning II", etc.) are trademarked just like Humvee is, but they have a lot more importance to Ace Combat's gameplay, featuring very heavily in promotional material and advertising to players. People don't buy Call of Duty in order to drive Humvees, but people do buy Ace Combat for the chance to fly an A-10.
Bandai Namco Studios has prided themselves on their relationships with the Japan Air Self-Defense Force and western air forces including the U.S. Air Force, as well as the aircraft companies including Boeing and Northrop-Grumman. Starting with AC04, Bandai Namco has licensed and gotten permission for most of the featured aircraft in the games, and it's part of that huge copyright message at the start of the games since ACE5. When those permissions expire, those games can no longer be sold, but that was never a problem because the games wouldn't be on shelves by the time that happened--until now, with digital games.
Assault Horizon was taken down from digital storefronts exactly 5 years after its release (2016 on PS3 and 360, 2018 on PC because it released a couple years later) which is a very clear indication that Bandai Namco had a five-year licensing agreement for the trademarks in AH. They could have easily renewed their agreement, but clearly they determined that the cost of renewing those agreements would not be recouped by how few sales the game was getting, so the plug was pulled.
Note, this is also why ACE5 and ACE6 were offered as pre-order bonuses for ACE7 pre-orders on console, but only as pre-order bonuses, because selling them would require renewing those trademarks again, for the aircraft and anything else (note Puddle of Mudd music in ACE5's soundtrack).
tl;dr Trademark law is complicated and Bandai Namco wants to avoid any potential problems at all costs.