Nintendo grants itself the power to brick Switches with pirated games

Date:

Share:


Nintendo’s latest legal move to combat piracy may be super effective. According to a new change in the Nintendo User Agreement, the console maker can brick your Switch, or render it useless, if it’s found with pirated games or mods. While some people may have glazed over the changes since Nintendo didn’t make this a major announcement, Game File’s Stephen Totilo dug through the changes and spotted the major updates.

In Nintendo’s own words, you shouldn’t “bypass, modify, decrypt, defeat, tamper with, or otherwise circumvent any of the functions or protections of the Nintendo Account Services.” The company’s previous agreement only prohibited if you “adapt, reverse-engineer, or modify a Nintendo user account,” but this updated language gives exact definitions of what you can’t do with your Switch. If you do break these rules, Nintendo could make your “applicable Nintendo device permanently unusable in whole or in part.” In plain English, that means if you’re found with an emulator or pirated copies of games, your Switch might just end up being a very expensive paperweight.

This latest legal leap isn’t surprising considering Nintendo’s strict stance on emulation. In March 2024, the company filed a lawsuit against the popular Switch emulator called Yuzu claiming that the developers were facilitating piracy. Later that year, another emulator called Ryujinx shut down after Nintendo offered an agreement to the development team to discontinue the project in October. This latest user agreement update comes on the heels of the upcoming release of the Switch 2 that’s planned for June 5.



Source link

━ more like this

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds’ third season falls short of its second

This is a spoiler-free preview of the first five episodes of season three.Star Trek: Strange New Worlds ended its second season with arguably...

What to read this weekend: Vampires and more vampires

I was pretty late in getting to this one, as it's been on my list for a good while now, but I really...

A native PS3 emulator for Android is available on the Play Store

We're another step closer to getting PlayStation 3 games to run smoothly on an Android smartphone. A little-known developer has released aPS3e, a...

Google Search uses AI-generated podcast hosts to answer your questions

Instead of digging through all the top search results, you can now ask Google Search to give you a comprehensive AI-generated summary with...

Apple will repair some Mac minis powered by M2 chips for free

If you have a new-ish Mac mini that has recently conked out, you are not alone. Apple has just launched a worldwide service...
spot_img