Zachary Strebeck is a California video game and board game lawyer, and founding attorney of Legal Moves PC, a game-centric law firm. Zachary has represented game clients for more than a decade, from solo indie game studios to film to video game licensing deals with budgets approaching $100 million.
Jacob Vela graduated from Willamette University College of Law and has focused his practice, Argo Law, on supporting game developers and other creatives with questions on intellectual property, contract, business, and other issues. He is also a game developer, so he aims to use his understanding of the practical needs of game developers to help with their legal and business needs.
As the video game industry continues to grow year over year, the need for counsel familiar with the specific issues game developers and publishers face is also growing. This CLE program will give an in-depth analysis of video game legal concepts and dive into some of the nuances that make the industry unique. The perfect guide for the practitioner who wants to represent game clients but doesn't know where to begin.
Key topics to be discussed:
This course is co-sponsored with myLawCLE.
Date / Time: January 7, 2026
Closed-captioning available
Zachary Strebeck | Legal Moves PC
Zachary Strebeck is a California video game and board game lawyer, and founding attorney of Legal Moves PC, a game-centric law firm. Zachary has represented game clients for more than a decade, from solo indie game studios to film to video game licensing deals with budgets approaching $100 million. He’s appeared on his own Legal Moves podcast and has been featured in the LA Times and other media, as well as being a featured speaker at Gen Con and numerous game conventions and podcasts.
Jacob Vela | Argo Law
Jacob Vela graduated from Willamette University College of Law and has focused his practice, Argo Law, on supporting game developers and other creatives with questions on intellectual property, contract, business, and other issues. He is also a game developer, so he aims to use his understanding of the practical needs of game developers to help with their legal and business needs. He has been a guest on the Freaking Cool Indies podcast as well as presented with Oregon Volunteer Lawyers for the Arts.
I. Video game studio formation issues | 1:00pm – 1:30pm
II. Intellectual property basics for games, from concept to registration to enforcement | 1:30pm – 2:00pm
Break | 2:00pm – 2:10pm
III. Game contracts analysis and negotiation points for clients on both sides of typical deals | 2:10pm – 2:40pm
IV. eSports, gambling, privacy, and other games industry issues | 2:40pm – 3:10pm