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- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
- [email protected]
- technology
This is the best summary I could come up with:
Four other emulator teams tell me they’re optimistic Nintendo won’t challenge them, that they’re on strong legal footing, and that Yuzu may have been an unusually incriminating case.
It’s partly true in how multiple forks of Yuzu (and 3DS emulator Citra) sprung up shortly after their predecessors died: Suyu, Sudachi, Lemonade, and Lime are a few of the public names.
As Ars Technica reported, a forked version called Suyu will require you to bring the firmware, title.keys, and prod.keys from your Switch before you can decrypt and play Nintendo games.
When I ask about the Dolphin Emulator, which faced a minor challenge from Nintendo last year, I’m told it publicly exposes its tiny nonprofit budget for anyone to scrutinize.
“The Yuzu Discord was really careful about not mentioning piracy — they even scanned the logs from bug reports to check whether the people are using self-made copies of games,” one fork contributor tells me.
“They had a metaphorical gun to their heads,” says another, calling bullshit on Yuzu’s admission that it was “primarily designed to circumvent and play Nintendo Switch games” and thus broke the law.
The original article contains 1,207 words, the summary contains 186 words. Saved 85%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!