Scrabble manufacturer targets 'Scrabulous' online game

By Caroline McCarthy on 15 January 2008

That noise you just heard was the sound of several hundred thousand procrastination-happy Facebook users gasping in panic.

Josh Quittner at Fortune reports that Hasbro, manufacturer of the timeless board game Scrabble, is trying to shut down Scrabulous, an unauthorised electronic version of Scrabble that has gained a rabid following on Facebook. The reasons are obvious: licensing. Scrabulous profits from advertising revenue. Hasbro, citing infringement, wants to see it scrapped.

There's no online version of Scrabble, but as Quittner notes, electronic rights to the game belong to video game manufacturer Electronic Arts. One of Scrabulous' creators confirmed to Quittner that Hasbro has contacted Facebook about removing the application.

Scrabulous was started in 2006 as a standalone site operated by a pair of 20-something Calcutta, India-based brothers, Jayant and Rajat Agarwalla, but the game exploded when they created a Facebook application that currently boasts 2.3 million active users and soon became the workplace productivity drain du jour. It's currently the ninth most popular application on the site. If Hasbro decides to take legal action against Scrabulous -- which seems rather likely -- it'll make a whole lot of cubicle monkeys very, very sad.

But Hasbro cares about its intellectual property, not about the desires of bored office workers. And, sadly, Scrabulous really does mirror Scrabble letter-for-letter: the "Rules of Scrabulous" section of Scrabulous' FAQ even redirects to the Wikipedia page for Scrabble. As Quittner wrote in his article, all good things must come to an end.

Topics: facebook, software, online, scrabble, scrabulous, games

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Comments (2)

  • geekgirl commented on 16/04/2009 17:32

    I have been searching for a legal version of the software because I don't want to download a heap of problems along with a "free" scrabble software download. No-one I email, EA, Mattel, Hasbro or GameHouse, will answer me. Do they want to make a legal sale or not??

  • Scheky commented on 20/01/2008 05:31

    This happened once before with a similar Scrabble site by a third party. I don't understand why Hasbro or EA doesn't develop their own version and reap the obviously huge potential advertising revenue.

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