Comment on Nintendo Confirms Backwards Compatibility for Switch Successor!
agelord@lemmy.world 1 month agoBecause it’s a shit company which seems to employ more lawyers than devs. Their lawyers routinely go after emulators which hurts game preservation. They also go after fan projects a lot which hurts the community.
john117@lemmy.jmsquared.net 1 month ago
as a major fan of classic video game emulation, I understand the conversation surrounding game preservation… but I draw the line at emulation of current gen games that are still actively being sold with hardware that you’re still easily able to purchase.
I can understand why nintendo may want to destroy and threaten anything that hosts software through unauthorized channels as well, as the biggest source of their income is gaming hardware and software. anything that threatens their main source of income will have the book thrown at them, wouldnt you do the same?
Check this quote out. if you were running a business, do you not see where they are coming from? I feel like their hands are tied:
varnumlaw.com/…/enforce-your-intellectual-propert….
MagnyusG@lemmy.world 1 month ago
what you’re against is piracy.
piracy of current gen games is what you’re against. As a consumer I should have the right to purchase a game (software) and do whatever the fuck I want with it, if I want to emulate Tears of the Kingdom because it runs and looks better on my computer than on my switch I should be allowed to do so. I purchased the console and the game, they’ve received my business, they should no longer have a say with what I do with my stuff.
Nintendo themselves use emulators for their products, there is nothing inherently wrong with emulation.
john117@lemmy.jmsquared.net 1 month ago
you should, but you dont. you fail to realize nintendo games are licensed to us. You do not own any software you puchase through nintendo. Take a look at the last two sections of this page:
so no, you cant just run it on whatever you want to, legally speaking. I think you should be able to do whatever you want with software, but its never been this way.
molotov@lemmy.world 1 month ago
This statement is misleading and a lie. Computer software encompass video games as part of the legal definition outlined in Galoob v. Nintendo in 1992, which Nintendo lost in court. They do not have legal leg to stand on if someone wants to make an archival copy of a game they own physically. The terms backup and archival are not interchangeable legally and Nintendo intentionally uses misleading language when answering the question.
Image