“Don't sue me for Pokémon”: Sora 2 app opens the floodgates for AI videos from Pikachu, Mario and more
Blog Andrew Joseph 02 Oct , 2025 0

Openai's Sora 2 Generative Video App is now available and it is immediately used to create countless videos with licensed characters such as Mario, Pikachu and a range of other videos Pokémon.
While Pikachu looks surprising in videos of Mario in Save Private Ryan or Star Wars, an Openai statement earlier this week suggests that the company knows exactly what people will reach when Sora 2 arrives, and that the company's own algorithms are clearly already trained.
according to Wall Street Journal According to reports, OpenAI has begun contacting film studios and other intellectual property owners to discuss the next step and provides them with the opportunity to retroactively opt out of their fictional roles, available in Sora 2’s AI videos.
But for now, it's an open season for Pikachu and his friends, as these initial results from Sora 2 prove (thanks, Nintendo Life):
“Dark Knight” pic.twitter.com/2HK0VLJBKJ
— Justine Moore (@venturetwins) October 1, 2025
Last – “The Tittic” starring Pikachu and Eevee pic.twitter.com/63hjzc9toy
— Justine Moore (@venturetwins) October 1, 2025
Ever wonder if Pikachu can chat (and not secretly) in human speeches? Well, strangely no longer – although you may regret listening to this.
Entertainment time, it's best to hear Pokémon Pikachu complain about Sora 2😬 pic.twitter.com/wlfqqenpoy
– skyla vtuber Huanping vtuber (@skyla_vtuber) October 2, 2025
While the characters are fair games, Openai has previously stated that both users of the app and those seeking to use a celebrity’s portrait need to manually choose their appearance. Of course, Openai Boss Sam Altman allows his similarity to use – so here he has a lightsaber battle with Pikachu:
Pokemon Don't sue me 🥲sora 2 is crazy pic.twitter.com/dinl6eysjl
– PM PROD (@PMProdresearch) October 2, 2025
Apart from Pokémon, Nintendo's own Mario character has been fully utilized. Then there is the last clip below, mashing Valve's portal and Activision's Tony Hawk's Pro Skater (and double peaks).
Sora 2 just broke the internet yesterday.
Reimagine famous movies
100% You have imitation
1. “Star Wars” but starring Mario and friends pic.twitter.com/t9qqot8rng
-min choi (@minchoi) October 2, 2025
This is my favorite Sora 2 generation so far.
It seamlessly combines the different game elements of the portal and Tony Hawk Pro Skater, then slips in the Twin Peaks reference…and generates in 1.5 minutes.
illusory. pic.twitter.com/c3xuezghsh– twinstar🌟(✿˵•́•̀˵)੭🧁 (@1KetaminePatch) October 1, 2025
Is this legal? “In short, we don’t have a clear answer yet,” Richard Hoeg Hoeg, creator of the virtual legality podcast Richard Hoeg, told IGN today. In some ways there are signs that as long as the material itself is obtained for legal purposes (rather than pirated). Disputes are not to resolve the law.
Hoeg continued: “The law moves slowly, far slower than technology, which is why you see these tech companies racing ahead of it a bit. My best guess is that OpenAI is probably going to be okay long term on the training sets they used (assuming they weren't pirated), and that the 'opt out of training' option therefore won't do much of anything. Where they really need to concern themselves is on the output side and/or If they are marketing their software's abilities with protected content themselves.”
IGN has contacted Nintendo and Pokémon Company for comment.
Last week, the famous lawsuit formally responded to the use of Pokémon TV hero Ash Ketchum and the Department of Homeland Security’s themed tune, part of a video showing people being arrested and handcuffed by law enforcement officers. A spokesperson told IGN, “Our company is not involved in the creation or distribution of this content and does not allow the use of our intellectual property.”
But while Pokémon may not be able to start legal action on the use situation, the company is still Fight sharply with Palworld developer Pocketpair In the Proposition Game Infringement of multiple patents. Earlier this week, former Capcom designer Yoshiki Okamoto was hinting at a strong opposition from Japan Pokémon and Nintendo's legal lawsuit against Palworld makes sensebecause Pocketpair's game “crossed the line that shouldn't be crossed”.
Tom Phillips is the news editor for IGN. You can reach Tom at [email protected] or find him on the Blues @tomphillipseg.bsky.social