Nintendo seems able to detect use of Mig Flash carts, which can also help enable piracy.
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And this is why I don't buy from Nintendo anymore. They believe they are the only ones with property rights. Frankly it's becoming increasingly apparent that Miyamoto was always just another greedy suit who got famous off the work of others for so many years.
i don’t think miyamoto is the one making the decisions.And this is why I don't buy from Nintendo anymore. They believe they are the only ones with property rights. Frankly it's becoming increasingly apparent that Miyamoto was always just another greedy suit who got famous off the work of others for so many years.
to play devil's advocate, citing a careless child prone to losing small cartridgesOther than the convenience feature of having a single cartridge contain all your games, what legitimate reason exists for playing game backups on a Switch at the moment?
Nintendo certainly thinks they are in the clear hereBanning someone for using their own backup would be a violation of the law. Should be interesting to see Nintendo dragged into court over this.
"Because I want to" is the only reason you need to do anything with your own private property.Other than the convenience feature of having a single cartridge contain all your games, what legitimate reason exists for playing game backups on a Switch at the moment?
My dog ate my cartridge. Or my two-year-old kid took my cartridges and threw them in the bathtub. Good thing I have a backup...Other than the convenience feature of having a single cartridge contain all your games, what legitimate reason exists for playing game backups on a Switch at the moment?
Banning someone for using their own backup would be a violation of the law. Should be interesting to see Nintendo dragged into court over this.
This is probably not the argument Nintendo would use in court, they would likely argue that this is was not because of copyright infringement, but that making these backups violate their user agreement.Personal game backups are EXPLICITLY protected by the DMCA. Nintendo has zero legal backing on this one.
While piracy is probably the overwhelming use for Mig Flash as a whole, I think there are a significant number of people who like owning physical Switch games but don't want to have to carry around/swap a bunch of game cards on the go, and the Mig Flash would be legitimately useful for that use case.The number of people who are using a MIG like the people supposedly are doing in this article are in the extreme minority. Like lets be frank here and acknowledge that MIGs are generally used for piracy in some capacity.
The fact that MIGs are universally looked as piracy tools by Nintendo shouldn't then shock anybody.
Also I find it funny that the usual anti-Nintendo trolls are out using this as another data point against Nintendo. As if Sony and MS let you make "backups" of physical discs and use them on their consoles right?
The number of people who are using a MIG like the people supposedly are doing in this article are in the extreme minority. Like lets be frank here and acknowledge that MIGs are generally used for piracy in some capacity.
The fact that MIGs are universally looked as piracy tools by Nintendo shouldn't then shock anybody.
Also I find it funny that the usual anti-Nintendo trolls are out using this as another data point against Nintendo. As if Sony and MS let you make "backups" of physical discs and use them on their consoles right?
Nintendo has the right not to allow any system to connect to its servers (Valve, Microsoft, Sony, etc. all do the same). Nintendo's not actively bricking these consoles or somehow breaking into people's homes and taking their Switch 2s.Personal game backups are EXPLICITLY protected by the DMCA. Nintendo has zero legal backing on this one.
If your original cartridge is damaged, you're still entitled to the software on it. This was common in the 2000's with scratched CD's. Same logic applies here. I bought the physical media AND its contents.Other than the convenience feature of having a single cartridge contain all your games, what legitimate reason exists for playing game backups on a Switch at the moment?
It doesn't take a "Nintendo fanboy" to recognize that the "criticism" is either invalid or unnecessarily targeted at Nintendo when it is a criticism of the home console industry altogether. I don't see Sony or Microsoft condoning running "backup discs" on PS5 or XBox Series systems, in fact, dealing with it similarly, but here we are with the "slight criticism" being "Fuck Nintendo, I'm not even buying Mario gummies because they are anti-customer!"I really hate the Nintendo fanboys who swarm these threads and downvote anyone who slightiy criticizes Nintendo or their products.
A ten year-old left his Switch case with the original cartridges in a restaurant, never to be seen again?Other than the convenience feature of having a single cartridge contain all your games, what legitimate reason exists for playing game backups on a Switch at the moment?
Nintendo has the right not to allow any system to connect to its servers (Valve, Microsoft, Sony, etc. all do the same). Nintendo's not actively bricking these consoles or somehow breaking into people's homes and taking their Switch 2s.
Also, breaking DRM for backups is explicitly prohibited by the DMCA.
https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/17/1201
Good news for these users then!Logic has no place in this thread.
MS/Sony has done this before.
My thoughts; if you want to use something like this keep it offline. Hasn't that been the basic thoughts for years with this stuff? The console goes online these companies can/will ban em.
FAFO is like that.Sucks for those who can never update their Switch2 forever more, or take the console online now.
I’ve had a two year old actually do this so….My dog ate my cartridge. Or my two-year-old kid took my cartridges and threw them in the bathtub. Good thing I have a backup...
Yep. I came here to say this. It's consumer-hostile, yet illegal to create a backup if you have to break DRM to do so. I hate it, but that is the law.Nintendo has the right not to allow any system to connect to its servers (Valve, Microsoft, Sony, etc. all do the same). Nintendo's not actively bricking these consoles or somehow breaking into people's homes and taking their Switch 2s.
Also, breaking DRM for backups is explicitly prohibited by the DMCA.
https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/17/1201
Yep. I came here to say this. It's consumer-hostile, yet illegal to create a backup if you have to break DRM to do so. I hate it, but that is the law.