Steam 설치
로그인
|
언어
简体中文(중국어 간체)
繁體中文(중국어 번체)
日本語(일본어)
ไทย(태국어)
Български(불가리아어)
Čeština(체코어)
Dansk(덴마크어)
Deutsch(독일어)
English(영어)
Español - España(스페인어 - 스페인)
Español - Latinoamérica(스페인어 - 중남미)
Ελληνικά(그리스어)
Français(프랑스어)
Italiano(이탈리아어)
Bahasa Indonesia(인도네시아어)
Magyar(헝가리어)
Nederlands(네덜란드어)
Norsk(노르웨이어)
Polski(폴란드어)
Português(포르투갈어 - 포르투갈)
Português - Brasil(포르투갈어 - 브라질)
Română(루마니아어)
Русский(러시아어)
Suomi(핀란드어)
Svenska(스웨덴어)
Türkçe(튀르키예어)
Tiếng Việt(베트남어)
Українська(우크라이나어)
번역 관련 문제 보고
Carnifex happens to be a name that is applied to a number of real creatures, both living and extinct. A large number of them are various kinds of beetle. I'd assume the "Carnifex" is a reference to those, not the Tyranids. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carnifex
Carnifex, though, is a real world word, which I took from some species of bugs I found. Wasp species, I think, same as my previous work, Ampulex. Games Workshop cannot trademark real world words.
I'd love to watch this, actually. Even staged.
I'd need to look up the exact citations, but before they got purchased by Disney, Marvel was in the news more often for their lawsuits than for their comics.
I know they went after the MMO City of Heroes just because it was theoretically possible to kind of duplicate the look of certain Marvel characters in the costume creator. (I'm pretty sure it turned out the only people making full Wolverine clones were Marvel employees though.) CoH banned a ton of words from character names as a result though. Including a huge number of fairly common animals.
I think they also tried to sue Pixar over the Incredibles, claiming that a super hero family with a strong guy, a stretchy hero, and a female who could turn invisible and make forcefields was clearly a violation of their many trademarks and copyrights on the Fantastic Four.
Thanks for compliments, though.