• JTskulkEnglish
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    Eww extremely embarrassing that they used Windows.

  • GreenKnight23English
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    pull a WordPress and force a TOS in the license to say you cannot be affiliated with Nintendo in any way in order to use this software.

    they want to emulate their hardware? then they can build their own emulator.

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      I believe they do have their own emulator. It logically would be what powers the Nintendo arcade

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    if its under GPL couldn’t they be forced to disclose the source code?

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    Just for the record, this is exactly what any museum would do, because they’re not going to actually run any of the older hardware. Because that hardware is part of their collection, and it behoves them not to put wear on them.

    Also because emulators can be managed remotely.

    • ampersandrewEnglish
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      Any other museum wouldn’t be a hypocrite for doing so.

    • finitebanjoEnglish
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      This is a “Museum” run by Nintendo in Japan. Meaning they could have used or even created more original hardware to run the titles, but instead cut costs by using the same Emulators that they’re hoping to take down.

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        Them being the original creator of the products doesn’t necessarily imply that they still have running production processes for every product that they ever made.

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      That is highly depending on the type of Museum. Many Videogame and Computer Museums (at least in Germany) are showing the real Hardware running, some are even allowing the visitors to use and play at the old machines. And yes, they are often very used to repairing the hardware too.

      I would expect from Nintendo that they would show and use real hardware in their museum, and not some emulators. Because I can see the games on an emulator at home (for example using my Switch Online or my SNES Classic), I don’t need a museum for that experience.

      • cryptiod137English
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        I know to be a certified museum in the US, you must work to preserve your articles in perpetuity, meaning anything that could be detrimental to the article is discouraged if not totally disallowed.

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          They’re fucking Nintendo. They made the consoles they’re showing off in their museum. They absolutely have the ability to supply that museum with equipment and maintain it in perpetuity, because they fucking invented it

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            That’s not the point of it though. Not about whether you could fix or maintain it when operating it, it’s about not operating it if presents a notable risk of failure. The Smithsonian doesn’t start grinding cornmeal in a bowl from the Mississippians. The Connecticut Museum doesn’t take it’s colt rifles out the range for target practice. These organizations would use a replica to demonstrate what it was like, as opposed to risking damaging an original article.

            Thats also not even necessary true either. While they may have invented there various consoles, at some point it will be nearly impossible to acquire replacement parts. They don’t manufacture the ICs or mainboards or the various discreet components. So if there’s no old stock, how would they “fix” a broken N64 (or later) console? It might be theoretically possible to fab a NEC VR4300 to replace a dead one, but probably cost hundreds of thousands, and it wouldn’t be broken anyway if you hadn’t left if running 16 hours a day so some sweaty tourists could play on real hardware.

            And why would they? It would cost more, be more work, and have less reliable results than using a completely replacable computer running an emulator. The entire consumer facing side of the equation is worse if they run the games on the actual hardware, as long as the consumer doesn’t see it, which is really down to how they design the exhibit.

            Do you think the public is understanding enough to accept that “The NES is really old and it broke so you can’t play super mario bros today”, when it’s the only day you are gonna be there? Temper tantrum, bad reviews, loss of face. From what I understand, Japan actually cares about all that, so Nintendo probably does as well.

        • MagiilaroEnglish
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          Ok that is not the case in Germany, here you can have items multiple times, to have some to archive and some to use.

          I can see that the preservation aspect is very valid for highly rare or one of a kind items, but that is generally not the case with retro hardware. Yes there are examples for that too (like C65 or other prototype stuff) but nobody would expect a museum to put that to use.

          • cryptiod137English
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            That’s the case For now.

            No one would have cared to preserve a Mosin Nagant from 1892 when they were making 500,000 of them, why would they? You can just go and buy more, the factory is right over there. Fast forward 132 years later, they are scarce antiques. And in another 100 years, there may only be a dozen left.

            The entire field of computers as we know it, integrated circuits, is about half as old as that particular rifle, and the technology has changed so fast, it’s really crazy.

            So while it might seem like that’s reasonable now, I mean the people who designed those systems are often still alive, even still working. Of course we can still fix and use them.

            Now give it 60 or so years, your sitting around in you retirement community, sad you lost the auction for a 2003 eMachines tower PC with all the stickers still attached, kicking yourself about how you tossed one out back in the day.

            At least you kept your Atari Jaguar, kept in a hermetically sealed container, that managed to save when you had to evacuate from the 2nd Finnish-Korean Hyperwar.

            Edit: Abominable spelling

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          Unless they store everything in high vacuum and near absolute zero, it’s going to get oxidized and fail eventually. There is no such thing as perpetuity. Might as well give them some use.

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            Your body is going to fail eventually, so you might as well stop brushing your teeth and start drinking scotch at breakfast. /s

          • cryptiod137English
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            You really think an old parchment document would survive being in a high vacuum and near absolute zero?

            Yeah sure, nothing lasts forever, but the really not the point. Your goal is to attempt to preserve your articles forever.

            Are you going to fall short? Absolutely, but your still required to attempt to do so. So you avoid doing anything directly harmful, such as operating an old computer, firing an old cannon, or diving an old car.

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      Even if they don’t use the real old hardware then at least they could have created something that is closer to the original hardware, for example a SNES/NES/N64 console based on FPGA in a recreated original shell. Anything but a stupid emulator running on a Windows PC.

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        An FPGA seems like a lot of effort, but an SNES emulator running on a Raspberry Pi seems like it may have been a better option IMO.

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      Plus you can do stuff like reset the emulator to a certain state pretty easily. Without having to reboot the hardware or anything. So you could do an exhibit on level 7 and have the game queued up to the level the exhibit is about.

  • StovetopEnglish
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    ITT: people think emulators are only the ones you can download

    • dustyDataEnglish
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      In this comment: Someone who is not familiar with the history of Nintendo selling pirated versions of their own games and ripping off pirate emulators then passing them as their own.

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        or the history of nintendo falsely claiming that emulation itself was an illegal practice when trying to bully and scare people into submission

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        Did the terms of the emulators they ripped off allow them to? Not saying it’s morally okay.

  • Nuke_the_whalesEnglish
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    But they own it. I thought even I could download a ROM if I have the actual game no?

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      No, at least in the US, you can only back up your own ROM if you own the game, not download someone else’s backup. The real problem here is that Nintendo’s (idiotic) stance is ALL emulation/backups are piracy and here they are being hypocrites about it.

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    I can see Nintendo shutting down his own museum for piratery.

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    Nintendo: Emulation is illegal, criminal, and you should never ever do it. If you do, we will sue your ass, send the Pinks, and then shit fury on you!!!

    Also Nintendo:


    Needless to say, I will not be buying an alarm clock today.

    • JarixEnglish
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      That’s not at all Nintendo’s philosophy.

      They literally included emulation starting with the wii

      So it is more of a rules for thee but not for me situation. Not you should never ever do it but you should only do it on our hardware with our emulators

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        I mean, their position is that they as the rights holders can republish how they please, but that buying a cartridge does not give you license to play on other devices. You can disagree with them on legal or philosophical grounds but their position isn’t really inconsistent.

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    I would not be at all surprised if the Switch NES and SNES emulators are running an open source emulator that they’ve tried to shut down.

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      Throwback to the NES Classic ROM having a ripper/uploader’s signature in the game code. Because Nintendo didn’t ever bother archiving their own games, and just downloaded ROMs from the same sites they were trying to shut down.

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      I would. They would have been found out already if it were the case, and they already proved they can develop their own emulators.

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        They’ve been caught using ROMs downloaded from some ROMs download website, so it wouldn’t be that surprising.

        • Something Burger 🍔English
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          No they have not. If they dumped their own cartridge or had the ROM somewhere in their archives, it would be identical to one downloaded from the Internet. The whole controversy happened because someone saw the iNES headers in whatever release of Super Mario Bros was new at the time. Those headers are added by all NES cartridge dumpers, and the creator of this format developed the NES emulator used by Nintendo in Animal Crossing for the GameCube.

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            Rom pirates usually trim and sign their releases, specially if they have to break or decode any encryption. These pirate’s signatures have been found in official Nintendo releases. Some of their own emulators have also been found to run piracy emulation software. They are pretty much hypocrites.

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        Moreover, they’re going to want an emulator that can be managed alongside the rest of the museum software.

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    You see

    It’s okay when THEY do it.

    It’s not okay when YOU do it.

    That’s how they function.

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      Well yeah, as the owners they have the exclusive right to determine what’s okay. They’re just following the rules as they’ve been laid out by centuries of corporate lobbying for more exploitable copyright laws. Those are what we need to focus on if we want more fair use of intellectual property that the rights holder has already sufficiently profited from - the thing that such protections were initially meant to ensure to a much more reasonable extent.

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        You had me in the first half ngl (more like first sentence but close enough)

        • SigntistEnglish
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          But they DO have the exclusive right. People want to be told the world is different - that it’s better - but if we want to change it we need to see it for what it is. If we say “They don’t have the right! before we’ve done the work necessary to strip them of the right, then we’ll never even understand how to start fixing this broken system.

    • Nuke_the_whalesEnglish
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      Wait are we arguing that the owner of something isn’t entitled more than someone who stole it?

      • NibodhikaEnglish
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        Wait are we arguing that the owner of something isn’t entitled more than someone who bought it?

        FTFY. The problem is not with Nintendo being against emulators because of piracy, they’re against emulators even if you own the game and the hardware but want to preserve the hardware (just like they do in the museum).

        And if the counter-argument is that you don’t own the game when you buy it, then by that same logic you don’t steal it when you pirate it.

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      Well, you know, the games are theirs to begin with.

      I see what you mean, and you are correct, but I think it’s more about the games that are being emulated than emulation in itself right?

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        It would be, if they didn’t target the emulators and only targeted the roms/game data.

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          The only time the emulators are targeted is when the creators try to profit off them, or am I mistaken?

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            That’s definitely not the case for Switch emulators.

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              Yuzu was charging for early access to their emulator, which is what prompted Nintendo action.

              Ryujinx doesn’t seem like any legal action was taken, sounds like the creator was given a chunk of cash by Nintendo to take it down.

              I hate Nintendo, but you gotta keep the facts straight

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                I don’t think they paid him off, I think it was more along the lines of “We won’t do anything to you if you stop now”

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                They also shut down Yuzu forks using the DMCA. If they paid Ryujinx’s dev it was the equivalent of the Mafia bribing a judge while waving a picture of his family.

                • AAAEnglish
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                  Totally the same /s

          • Chozo
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            That, and when Nintendo’s code is used in some way to develop the project. Japan has very strict laws on reverse engineering any software, which Nintendo is always set to capitalize on.

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        I don’t disagree they are their games, but is it their emulator, or did they just download one of the many online? Really doesn’t matter, just love to see companies bitch about something, then turn around and do it themselves.

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        What about the fan games that were made of pure passion for the IP that they’ve taken down?

        To name a few:
        Pokemon Uranium
        Pokemon Prism
        Mario Maker 64
        Another Metroid 2 Remake
        Zelda Maker
        Ocarina of Time 2D
        Zelda 30

        There are countless others I’m sure.

        FUCK Nintendo.

    • Chozo
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      Nintendo has never been against emulation. They’ve only been against people playing without paying.

      • Pyflixia
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        Yes they have. They’ve just recently nuked on the Switch emulator.

        And you can bet that if they could, Nintendo would go out of their way to sue any other emulator developer that emulates their games. The only things saving some of those emulators is technicalities like open-source.

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          I’m not going to check the whole archive, but going back to at least 2005, Nintendo was asking users to

          report ROM sites, emulators, Game Copiers, Counterfeit manufacturing, or other illegal activities

          https://web.archive.org/web/20051124194318/http://www.nintendo.com/corp/faqs/legal.html

          Here’s some more quotes from the same page where Nintendo is viciously anti-emulation:

          The introduction of video game emulators represents the greatest threat to date to the intellectual property rights of video game developers. As is the case with any business or industry, when its products become available for free, the revenue stream supporting that industry is threatened. Such emulators have the potential to significantly damage a worldwide entertainment software industry which generates over $15 billion annually, and tens of thousands of jobs.

          Distribution of a Nintendo emulator trades off of Nintendo’s goodwill and the millions of dollars invested in research & development and marketing by Nintendo and its licensees. Substantial damages are caused to Nintendo and its licensees. It is irrelevant whether or not someone profits from the distribution of an emulator. The emulator promotes the play of illegal ROMs , NOT authentic games. Thus, not only does it not lead to more sales, it has the opposite effect and purpose.

          Personal Websites and/or Internet Content Providers sites That link to Nintendo ROMs, Nintendo emulators and/or illegal copying devices can be held liable for copyright and trademark violations, regardless of whether the illegal software and/or devices are on their site or whether they are linking to the sites where the illegal items are found.

          • Chozo
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            Nintendo’s been openly emulating their own games since about that time. IIRC, the SNES Virtual Console on the Wii had code from SNES9X in it.

            The distinction (which seems nobody cares about) is that Nintendo’s going after copyright infringers. If your emulator doesn’t use any of Nintendo’s code, they ain’t doing shit about it; they’re just gonna steal it, if anything.

            • vaguerant
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              Somebody has fed you or you have invented bad information. Neither Yuzu nor Ryujinx, the two Switch emulators which recently ceased development due to intervention from Nintendo, included Nintendo’s code. The Yuzu settlement required those developers to acknowledge that

              because our projects can circumvent Nintendo’s technological protection measures and allow users to play games outside of authorized hardware, they have led to extensive piracy.

              There was never any mention of them stealing Nintendo code.

              Ryujinx, we know even less about, because the agreement went down privately, but there’s literally zero indication of any stolen code. We know that Nintendo contacted the developer proposing that they cease offering Ryujinx and they did.

              Obviously, Nintendo was bothered in both of these cases because the emulators do facilitate piracy, but that’s not the same as them having infringed on Nintendo’s copyright by using their code which you are claiming. Both of these emulators were developed open-source; if they were built using stolen Nintendo code there would be receipts all over the place. That was never the problem.

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                Yuzu supported unreleased games. To do that required using Nintendo’s code, and getting that code through unauthorized channels. Nintendo’s code may not have been distributed through Yuzu, but it was used in a way that was not permitted in order to engineer a way to circumvent the copy protection of those games. That was how Nintendo was able to go after them.

                • MaalusEnglish
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                  Dude why are you digging this hole even deeper. They are going after emulators. That’s a proven fact. You can try to handwave it however you wish, but that won’t change reality. Nintendo goes after emulators, after modders, after content creators playing those mods. An emulator can play games, that’s what it’s there for. I don’t see how an emulator would work otherwise.

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          I kinda get that they’ll do whatever than can to shut down an emulator for a console still selling and available on the shelves though. Not that there aren’t legitimate cases for it (homebrew software and games), but that’s not what Nintendo is concerned about.

          But screw that for legacy consoles, game preservation is important too.

          • DasusEnglish
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            I kinda get that they’ll do whatever than can to shut down an emulator for a console still selling

            If I hadn’t downloaded Yuzu and BOTW, Nintendo would’ve probably missed out on several hundreds euros my brother spent on buying a Switch, several games, controllers and supplies, albeit some of the supplies are 3rd party so Nintendo probably didn’t make profit off them.

            Piracy definitely increases sales. I would have never bought a Switch in the situation I was in some years back, but having downloaded it and gotten very into it, my brother wanted to as well and he didn’t care to pirate, and had actual uses for Switch’s properties that you don’t get on emulators, like online play and the portability of the console itself.

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              It’s just that it’s hard to actually quantify, so the shareholders will prefer to go with enforcement that forces people to buy the games and console than taking a risk on hypotheticals.

              Personally, I never bought a Wii U/Switch and played my fair share of games through emulation only.

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          They’ve just recently nuked on the Switch emulator.

          Because it was being used for piracy. As in, had support in the emulator’s code for unreleased games. Nintendo rarely goes after emulator devs that don’t use their code.

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            Supporting unreleased games does not mean they used Nintendo code. The whole point of an emulator is to perfectly reproduce the original system. That means working on any switch game, regardless of whether said game has been released or even thought of. In practice it isn’t that simple because they are attempting to replicate a very complex system, so there will usually be patches whenever giant games come out that use the system in different ways. However, that doesn’t mean Nintendo code is being used at all.

            • Chozo
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              Right, but Yuzu did, tho. That’s how Nintendo shut them down. Yuzu overstepped and handed Nintendo their own noose. They probably would’ve been just fine if they hadn’t given out builds with those tools built-in.

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              I’m not defending Nintendo, dude. I’m explaining how they’re able to shut down emulators. It’s possible to make legal emulators, and Nintendo won’t touch them.

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            They didn’t use any code. Any keys were dumped from an existing Switch. Yuzu got taken down not as a result of a lawsuit, but because of the threat of one. Famously Bleem won their emulator lawsuit from PlayStation, but still went bankrupt anyway, so most emulator projects don’t even try to fight any legal battles.

      • FeelzGoodMan420English
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        Just curious - what size rock do you live under? Is it room sized or as large as a house? How do you decorate? Is it climate controlled?

  • NexyEnglish
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    Anyway, what’s the point of a museum of a console maker without showing original hardware?

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      They have original hardware on display.

    • doctortranEnglish
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      That’s like saying what’s the point of the air and space museum if they’re not actually flying the planes.

      They’re not going to use the original hardware and put wear on them. That’s a standard part of archiving.

      • MagiilaroEnglish
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        No it is more like saying “What is the point of going to an museum of art when all the paintings and statues are only photocopies and 3D printed replicas”

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    I mean

    All of those mini consoles (NES mini, SNES mini) are already SOCs with an emulator.

    • RangerJosieEnglish
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      Corps are shameless. No amount of hypocrisy is enough to make them reconsider their evil.

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        Yeah, that shallow appreciation is why you can’t truly understand them, it’s like calling a shark evil when it eats a baby seal.

        They are, but you need to understand the system so you can know how they get where they get, and how to counter them.

        Don’t just be an angry mother seal.

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          Why are you here? You’re more cringe than Nintendo right now. There’s absolutely no reason to insult that guy.

          • InverseParallaxEnglish
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            Because I’ve worked with the marketing assholes who lead to these decisions, and if you don’t get why they make them and how to get them fired for those decisions, you’ll never change anything.

            That’s the difference between being a child, and being effective.

            • MangoEnglish
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              Ooohhh, you’re trauma dumping. Well carry on then. Tell us about the good corps who are just getting ruined by evil marketing assholes.

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                They’re not, Jesus, what is wrong with you?

                They’re greedy and ambitious, but also cowardly.

                Saying ‘Nintendo’ doesn’t hurt much, the corporation is almost numb to criticism, it knows it will sell games.

                Find the marketing moron responsible and destroy his career, that’s the only way you make a difference.

                Do this enough times, and eventually they become more afraid of the community’s wrath than their ambition to get a promotion by kissing ass.

                Take down a few VPS of marketing, you’re can start influencing them, because they’ll start community outreach before doing shit.

                Corporations are a hard outer shell to protect the sensitive inner meat, don’t attack the shell, take down the inner bits.

                • MangoEnglish
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                  The people change, but the streets are always the same.

    • FlaxEnglish
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      The Switch has a SNES emulator as well

      • macnielEnglish
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        The 3ds was a full on emulation machine. Heck it started with the Wii!

        • vaguerant
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          I’d say it started on at least Nintendo 64. The original Japan-only Animal Crossing game for N64 had playable, emulated Famicom (NES) games. Nintendo even ran a special offer to get an N64 Controller Pak with Ice Climber pre-loaded which you could plug into your controller like a game cartridge and play inside Animal Crossing.

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      Nintendo had uses emulators for a long time. This really isn’t anything news worthy.

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      Um they are, and have been for almost 20 years, since the Wii. Or the N64 depending on how you look at it.

      What did you think Virtual Console was? How about the NES and SNES mini? What about the “Nintendo Game Pass” or whatever they’re calling it?

      Animal Crossing’s original Japan release had NES games in it, and so did the GC rerelease/psuedosequel we got internationally too.


      Even better: During the Wii era, the Wiis at the Nintendo Store in New York City ran official Nintendo made software to load games off a connected hard drive, so you could play multiple of their new releases without workers having to switch discs.


      It has always been about attempts to prevent piracy and keep control over how people access their games for Nintendo, and they are roughly 10 years behind the curve on modern tech trends.

      Either stop supporting them or get used to it.

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        There is no way to legally buy their ROMs anymore. You can only rent them in perpetuity. When they did sell them, they didn’t forward port your purchases to their next device, which is hilariously stupid, and you know they’d take you to court for dumping those same ROMs to your PC to organize, customize, and play the way you like them. If they just sold these things DRM-free on a web site for me to put in Emulation Station, we wouldn’t be having this discussion.

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        The problem is that they had stuff like Virtual Console and then decide to pull the plug. Then rebrand as some other feature in an online service, which is yet another service that’s gonna be a wait and see on whether or when they’ll pull the plug again. Forcing people to pay for old stuff over and over again.

        They should sell this kind off stuff independently from their consoles/handhelds, preferably something that runs on a PC or any platform.

        The NES and SNES mini were great examples of how it could be done, except there too they decided to only make a limited amount, essentially the same as pulling the plug.

        Nintendo’s truly an awful company. It’s baffling how often they get praised for their stuff, they only dangle some 15+ year old reskinned game and people forget all about it.

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            I think, like that post mentions as well, that prices were the biggest issue. The points system being a garbage system in the first place, easily a system I would instantly be turned off from, I absolutely hate buying currencies to buy something, instead of just outright seeing the actual prices in the store. But if you’d want to buy a small collection for a couple of decades old games it would add up quickly.

            The problem with Nintendo’s always been the insane prices. I’m especially hesitant to buy anything digital or any services from Nintendo. Knowing they could decide to pull the plug any time again.

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            Probably after people learned that nintendo had no proper account system so you would lose your purchases if your console died and needed the hassle of sending it to them for them to transfer to a new console.

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              Yeah, I stopped buying from the VC when the Wii U asked me to pay to “upgrade” my games.

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      I’d bet the emulators in use are actually publicly available ones. Not anything Nintendo made. Adding to the hypocrisy.

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        I hate to defend Nintendo, but they used their own Emulators in the NES and SNES Mini (Kachikachi and Canoe respectively). I would be surprised if they just yoinked one from the internet here.

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          I mean, they’ve done it before in part.

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      Maybe they wrote their own emulator

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    The emulator they use for N64 on the Switch is also just one of the many options that com up when you Google “We can’t be arsed reviewing our own assembler”