“Billy Mitchell, the former Donkey Kong and Pac-Man high-score champion made famous in the 2007 film The King of Kong, has threatened legal action against the sanctioning bodies who threw out all of Mitchell’s high scores in April 2018 after finding that two were illegitimate,” reports Polygon.
This week, lawyers for Mitchell sent a letter to Twin Galaxies and Guinness World Records demanding that both “retract their claims against Billy Mitchell” and restore the scores to their world record leaderboards, where Mitchell had been a fixture since the early 1980s… The letter to Twin Galaxies alleges that it defamed Mitchell, both in its findings and in later posts to their website.
In banning Mitchell, Twin Galaxies also vacated records that were not in question, and banned Mitchell from further participation in their leaderboards. One of Mitchell’s records thrown out was a “perfect score” in Pac-Man (reaching the maximum number of points available in its 255 levels). Mitchell’s attorneys say Twin Galaxies implied that score was tainted by cheating, too.

Guinness, say the lawyers, cited that disqualification in its 2019 Gamers Edition compilation of records in saying that Mitchell’s “submitted scores were obtained while using [the emulator] MAME,” which the attorneys take to mean as applying to all of Mitchell’s scores, from 1982 to present day. They say that is factually incorrect and also impossible, as MAME was created in 1997…

The letter also alleges that Twin Galaxies “did not provide Billy Mitchell fair opportunity to provide evidence to prove his innocence,” and that “specific evidence was accepted, while evidence of equal stature was rejected.”
A 156-page package summarizing Mitchell’s defense has been posted in Reddit’s videogame speedrunning forum. It argues that the documentary’s makers actually have filmed footage in which a videotaped high-score attempt at Funspot Arcade is clearly announced to be “not a score submission. This is for entertainment purposes only.” And while the film-makers show that score being submitted, “this was only acting done for the movie…the scoreboard shown by the movie was forged…. Actually, in the King of Kong movie, the tape I hand Doris Self is a WWE Wrestling tape, not my 1,047,200 performance… The movies portrayal that I submitted this performance is fictitious.”

Mitchell’s documents argue that that score was submitted later — without his permission — by a referee for Twin Galaxies, arguing that the footage suffers from a compromised chain of custody. The documents even include emails written by the owner of the web site fuckbillymitchell.com “saying he has a ‘master plan’ to take Billy Mitchell down,” along with statements from two separate witnesses who say that man had even at one point asked for help in how to fake footage of a videogame.

“I find the current accusation of Mitchell too close to exactly what Richard planned in 2009 to be overlooked.”

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