Reviewers, developers, or YouTubers with access to games before general Switch users often leak unlock codes or other information to small groups, which then may trickle out to the wider community. There are coders who make programs to streamline the process of downloading or running games. There are reverse engineers who figure out how Nintendo’s own tools work, so hackers can then use them for their own advantage. Instead, there’s a complex supply chain constantly grinding away that helps people source and play unreleased games. Pirating games for the Switch is not technically straightforward. And some people in the scene have been doxed, meaning they’ve had their personal information published online. Groups deliberately plant code into others' Switches so they no longer work. Pirates deploy malware to steal each other’s files so they can download more games themselves. The Switch piracy community-much of which operates on the gamer-focused chat app Discord-is full of ingenuity, technical breakthroughs, and evolving cat-and-mouse games between the multi-billion dollar Nintendo and the passionate hackers who love the company but nonetheless illegally steal its games. Motherboard granted a number of sources anonymity to speak more candidly about private communities and illegal activity, and to avoid repercussions from other members other sources requested anonymity because they did not have permission from their employers to speak to the press. The drama is crazyyyyy,” the source added. “They keep on coming,” a source from one of the private, tight-knit Switch chat rooms told Motherboard in an online chat.īehind every free, pirated game, there’s a lot more going on. In another instance, pirates managed to get their hands on Dark Souls: Remastered, another much-anticipated game ported to the Switch. Whoever the source was, they had released other games over the last few months, including games up to two weeks in advance of their general sale a big win. This approach of disguising the original source of the leak by using a middleman was the right way to release games early, or ‘pre-street,’ one of the pirates chimed in, according to chat logs from a private group of a few dozen Nintendo Switch pirates obtained by Motherboard.
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May 2023
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