covering Switch emulators that successfully ran Metroid Dread; the article was revised after Kotaku'' received a complaint from Nintendo. On October 9, 2021,
Kotaku published an article stating that
Metroid Dread was running "great" on Yuzu and Ryujinx, adding that "you can play
Dread on your computer, right now", and including several positive mentions of
video game piracy, thanking "pirates, emulators,
modders, and
hackers" and suggesting readers emulate older or expensive games themselves. and, following a complaint from Nintendo, removed all mentions of piracy from the article and issued an apology for its initial failure to meet their editorial standards, adding that they had not intended to suggest that players should pirate video games. Noelle Warner of
Destructoid, while saying that
Kotaku had "basically told players to download an emulation of
Metroid Dread", also noted the response to
Kotaku on social media had rekindled discussion about the role of emulators in game preservation projects. After the publicization of Yuzu's ability to run on the
Steam Deck, several YouTube videos providing guidance on how to do so were taken down. Though it was not known who had issued the takedowns, outlets reporting on the news believed that it was Nintendo, given their past history of issuing
DMCA takedown notices against unofficial content creators. A promotional video released by Valve in October 2022 briefly displayed Yuzu's icon in a Steam Deck's home menu, but the video was later taken down and reuploaded after being edited to remove this. On August 24, 2022,
Denuvo Software Solutions GmbH announced that they had developed "Nintendo Switch Emulator Protection", a new
digital rights management measure for Nintendo Switch titles intended to block play of emulated games. Nintendo Switch owners on social media widely criticized the announcement of this software, expressing concerns that it would hinder software performance, citing Denuvo DRM's history of being reported as impacting PC gaming performance. However, Denuvo said in statements to the press that it would not negatively impact performance of Switch games for those playing on real console hardware. Denuvo declined to disclose the names of any other companies involved, but said that Nintendo was not involved and that there had been "strong demand" from software publishers for such an anti-piracy measure. In November 2022, Nintendo filed several
DMCA takedown notices against the website SteamGridDB, which hosts a collection of video game images intended for use as custom-set header and cover images of non-Steam games imported into users' personal Steam libraries.
GamesRadar and
Nintendo Life suggested that these notices, which were specifically aimed at recent or particularly notable titles such as
Breath of the Wild,
Pokémon Scarlet and Violet, and
Xenoblade Chronicles 3, were issued with the intent to discourage users from playing those games on their PCs or Steam Deck devices via emulation software. On February 27, 2024, Nintendo filed a lawsuit against Tropic Haze LLC, the legal entity behind Yuzu. Later, on March 4, 2024, Tropic Haze settled their lawsuit with Nintendo for $2.4 million, and took down the source code, Patreon, Discord, and website for Yuzu as well as a Nintendo 3DS emulator created by the same company called
Citra. In June 2024, Nintendo filed a lawsuit against James Williams, who had been involved in operating a piracy network of Nintendo Switch games on the SwitchPirates
Reddit online community. Later in November, Nintendo submitted a court filing that sought information of the people who worked with Williams on Reddit,
Discord, and
GitHub. The company demanded permission to deliver subpoenas on the individuals. == See also ==