![]() ![]() Related: Super Mario 64 Plus Port Adds Permadeath & 60 FPSĪs such, the newly released Super Mario 64: Browser Edition (thanks, NintendoLife) might be the next to draw Nintendo’s legal ire. That's not even to mention as the company's own legal drama surrounding a drifting glitch in the Switch’s Joy-Con controllers, over which it's still fighting a class-action lawsuit. Speaking of Mario’s spiky nemesis, Nintendo recently filed a lawsuit against a piracy operation run by a Gary Bowser, who had been hacking and redistributing 3DS and Switch games for several years. The video game juggernaut and Switch manufacturer has been on the warpath when it comes to piracy of its various games and properties even more than usual lately, filing (and winning) lawsuits and sending out cease-and-desist letters about as fast as Lakitu drops Spinies on the plumber's capped head.Īmong the emulators, copycats, and unapproved creations that have been caught in Nintendo’s legal crosshairs over the past few years were a PC port of Super Mario 64 that caught the internet’s attention in May 2020, as well as a painfully obvious Pokémon rip-off and some lewd Bowser fan art that are each better off forgotten, anyway. ![]() Anyone with a web browser can now play a fully emulated version of Super Mario 64 for free - but it'll probably be taken down by Nintendo before long. ![]()
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