[...] If the law says they have to pay up, they have to pay up and opinions of butthurt gamers on the internet doesn't matter.
Does it say that though?
You're forgetting about
ratio legis (reason for the law) as well as
pacta sunt servanda (agreements are to be honored). The whole situation is far less clear than you make it seem so. Sapkowsky could try and make his claim before the court, but the CDPR also had arguments speaking in their favor, which is why Sapkowsky is going to take a deal with CDPR and get a few millions out of it, instead of trying to battle for the whole sum.
So you are are polish contract lawyer. Sapkowski "could try" is a wrong statement if the law explicit says that he is entitled to. Even in USA were they had the least law intervention into contract agreements there were artist who have went to court over such an agreements like in the case of Joe Shuster and Jerry Siegel. But Poland is polish and ruled by Poles and they decide how parties and contracts are subjected to the law of their land and it is their moral values that are their basis for their law.
They settled and paid him millions, because they knew that legally he wasn't owed anything.
This is definitely a thing that happens.
They settled because they would lose in a court of law.
They settled, because it's ultimately better for them that way.
If they don't settle, they'll enter into a long fight they don't want to be in for PR reasons alone, and the judge MAY still decide that Sapkowsky should get some allowance.
If they settle now - and for a sum of their choosing - they avoid the whole years-long struggle in the court, they get to shut up Sapkowsky and any of his further claims on the subject and will be seen as "the good guys from CDPR who gave Sapkowsky the money he didn't really deserve" in the eyes of the public opinion, which matters to them more than a few millions they're going to pay.
You have received a retarded tag from me with this statement and i will explain to you why, because up until this you were quite good (not correct).
Settlements are only better for a party, if they settlements spare them costs and time, like costs of the court or cost due to losing the case. And since time is money ...
The damage for the CDPR's PR is null, since nearly all of the people that play their games do not read his books, therefore there is no connection to this artist on a personal level. The next product of the Witcher franchise will take year and people will forget this entire thing in that time.
Also it was CDPR that damaged (not really) their own PR with going public with the demands send from Sapkowski's lawyer and not Sapkowski himself or his lawyers (they tried to keep it covered up). So yes your PR argument is retarded.
For CDPR a court case and the lawyer costs are just peanuts and they could drag it on for years without breaking a sweat, but for Sapkowski this is a very different thing. Lawyers have a high cost and who could pay them better off a billion dollar heavy company or some old fart that recieved $2000 from CDPR?
CDPR could have made a great PR stunt out of it, if they would have published: That due to the recent great accomplishment of their company and they gratefulness towards Sapkowski they honor him as a national treasure by paying him additionally a grateful sum, so that his grandchildren will live a secure life. This could have been made with giving him the check and some hugging and praising his works and lot of cameras. How do you think the public would have reacted to this? CDPR would be in every mouth alone for this and they would have been the good guys with a great relation to Sapkowski and polish nation.
But they didn't, because they were sure to win a court case based on their understanding of contract laws and they made the stupid decision to publish the letter from the Sapkowski's lawyers against their demand. After CDPR's lawyers have checked with the law and the probable reaching out the court by Sapkowski's Layers CDPR knew that they will pay. And so they went for the least costly way and for the settlement, which was probably also the goal of Sapkowski's lawyers, because a court case could go on for years to come.
No company, insurance or bank wants to pay money to others, because they are not welfare enterprises! It is the probable lose at a court that forces them to pay. And if they can drag out the payment out for years then they will.