As an ultimate flex, after having overwhelmed the children asset flippers who created Palworld and dared to try to sign it in under Sony, Nintendo has released a Palworld clone mocking their rival, named Palland.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/entertainment/gaming/palworld-gets-taste-of-own-medicine-as-copycat-game-pops-up-on-nintendo-switch/ar-AA1KyxZ0
Although the game has failed to achieve the same commercial success as Palworld, the message is sent: there is nothing but oblivion awaiting Palworld.
In the last development of the industry-changing Palworld x Nintendo lawsuit, GameFreak's TPC lawyers retroactively changed and added text to an existing patent — something nearly unprecedented in videogame intellectual property lawfare — in order to completely invalidate Palworld's attempt to maintain mountable pals in their game (which were there on release). And this petition to retroactively change patents was accepted and passed, indicating that japanese courts favour Nintendo.