Hey everyone!
If you’ve been following the emulation scene lately, you probably already know that things have taken a turn for the worse. Nintendo’s recent legal actions have shut down some of the biggest names in Switch and 3DS emulation—Yuzu, Ryujinx, and Citra—along with their forks. While Nintendo claims this is a necessary move to combat piracy, the takedowns have left many gamers wondering:
Is emulation a threat to intellectual property, or is it the only way to preserve gaming history?
I just published an in-depth article that dives into this very question:
Nintendo vs. Emulation: Can Copyright and Game Preservation Coexist?
If you’ve been following the emulation scene lately, you probably already know that things have taken a turn for the worse. Nintendo’s recent legal actions have shut down some of the biggest names in Switch and 3DS emulation—Yuzu, Ryujinx, and Citra—along with their forks. While Nintendo claims this is a necessary move to combat piracy, the takedowns have left many gamers wondering:
Is emulation a threat to intellectual property, or is it the only way to preserve gaming history?
I just published an in-depth article that dives into this very question:
