Home News Japan Arrests First Alleged Nintendo Switch Modder in New Era of Video Game Piracy

Japan Arrests First Alleged Nintendo Switch Modder in New Era of Video Game Piracy

by Samuel Apr 03,2025

Video game piracy has entered a new era with the first-ever arrest in Japan of an individual accused of modifying Nintendo Switch hardware. As reported by NTV News and translated by Automaton, a 58-year-old Japanese man was apprehended on January 15 on suspicion of violating the Trademark Act. He allegedly modified Switch consoles to run pirated games and then sold them. This modification involved welding altered parts onto the circuit boards of second-hand consoles, enabling them to play 27 illegally accessed games. These consoles were reportedly sold for ¥28,000 (approximately $180) each. The suspect has confessed to the charges and is under further investigation for potential additional violations.

Nintendo has been actively combating piracy for years. In a notable case, a takedown request in May 2024 targeted 8,500 copies of the Switch emulator Yuzu, following the emulator's removal two months earlier. The lawsuit against Yuzu's creator, Tropic Haze, highlighted that Nintendo's flagship game, The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom, was pirated over one million times before its official release in 2023. Legal actions against piracy are increasingly common, with successful lawsuits such as the one against the game file sharing website RomUniverse, which resulted in a $2.1 million damage award to Nintendo in 2021, and another case in 2018 that led to over $12 million in damages. Additionally, Nintendo blocked the GameCube and Wii emulator Dolphin from being released on the PC gaming platform Steam.

This week, a patent lawyer representing Nintendo shed light on the company's stance on piracy and emulation. Koji Nishiura, Assistant Manager of Nintendo's Intellectual Property Division, addressed the legality of emulators, stating, "To begin with, are emulators illegal or not? This is a point often debated. While you can’t immediately claim that an emulator is illegal in itself, it can become illegal depending on how it’s used."

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