It is likely that we will become more and more accustomed to seeing new requests for Nintendoand the company seeks to hold the record for the largest number of complaints what a company can do, after knowing the state of that which it has formalized against the creators of World Palwe now know that they also launched one against a streamer. And in this case, it’s not just any one, since of all the ones we’ve seen recently, it’s the one that probably makes the most sense, even if Nintendo requests that the banner pay, this prevents us from taking the request.
Being one of the most important companies in the video game sector, Nintendo has also managed to become the one that generates the greatest number of jokes among users, since one of the most repeated themes is not only that its games are good, whether they have the best-selling consoles in history or dominate the portable market, but one of the aspects that resonates most with the company is the tendency it has to pursue practically everything what is presented to him.
Nintendo takes legal action against streamer for streaming games before launch
We know that the Japanese company tends to report users or companies that violate their intellectual property in one way or another. In some cases we may think that what they usually ask for might be a bit excessive, but now they have taken legal action. could easily win. And in this case, the brand is very clear about the offense committed by the person it accuses, a streamer called EveryGameGuru who allegedly broadcast different games of the company before their official launch.
From Nintendo They take the launches of their titles, as well as the patents of their consoles, very seriously, which is an obvious reason for complaint the fact that either of the two was leaked in advance, and this might be the most normal request we’ve seen in recent years from the brand. While that doesn’t mean the penalty is extremely high, what’s practically the brand’s hallmark for each of its complaints is that it demanded that the accused end up paying $150,000 for each cases of violation of rights. . author.
In this case, the user would have transmitted 10 games different from Nintendo on at least 50 occasions, some of which were allegedly not even released on the market, while the others “favored and encouraged the downloading of pirated copies of unreleased games” because they could play them through emulators. The total number of user infringement cases is estimated to be $7.5 million, a figure that virtually no one can afford, and which would put the content creator in a very bad situation.
What is clear is that the company does not have any type of financial problems, but it still finds a way to make us believe that it is submitting requests directly because it does not have enough income, and in most cases they are disproportionate, much more so since it must be borne in mind that they denounce a single individual.