Starke said:
Yeah, if EA actually wins this, it'll be really troubling for the industry as a whole. The end result of cloning lawsuits like this wouldn't be trying to take out clones, it would be simply another means to stifle competition. If you're EA and you want to stop, say, an independent developer from releasing a game, you simply find a similar title in your ridiculously massive back catalog and sue them for "cloning" that.
You'd notice that EA has not done anything to the makers of Anno 2070 or CitiesXL, and probably other similar SimCity style world building games. I'm guessing, as I haven't played them, that while they are inspired by the Sim* series, the mechanics of those games are probably very different.
What Zynga is infamous for, and probably what the crux of this lawsuit is about, is directly ripping off both art style and gameplay mechanics. Indeed, we've seen numerous articles of the owner of Zynga telling the employees to not innovate, but just to directly copy things off their competitors, then leverage their huge player base to drown the competitors away.
Only this time, the group they tried to drown is a whale known as EA.
EA knows a frivolous and vague lawsuit won't get anywhere, like if they tried it against the other games, so chances are this one is going to be very, very specific, and it increases their chances of success.