Nintendo's lawyers and representatives are just about as fast as Super Mario 64 speedrunners. Last week an amazing Super Mario 64 PC port popped up online to the surprise of many. The dazzling 4k port ...
Like any other company, Nintendo is notorious for sending lawyers after fans that have a more liberal view on what they may or may not do with the company's treasured IPs (intellectual properties).
In a move that should come as a surprise to no one, Nintendo has filed copyright claims with YouTube and Google over content connected to the latest unauthorised PC port of Super Mario 64. That port, ...
You might have recalled recently that a fan managed to get a proper PC port of Super Mario 64 working and out into the public. This was quite the feat and one that has plenty of fans happy as before ...
The fan-created port was highly praised by the community. Nintendo has a long line of IPs and iconic video game titles. Most of those games are firmly kept in control by Nintendo though it’s not too ...
A popular PC port of Super Mario 64 now supports mods. Mods can improve the textures of the game and replace Mario with a higher definition Mario from Super Mario Galaxy. Nintendo is taking action ...
If there’s anything you can absolutely count on Nintendo to do, it’s stomp and snuff out any and all unauthorized use of its IPs in recreations, remakes, and otherwise enjoyable content. Such is ...
A Mario fan has made a lovely, functional port of the Nintendo 64 classic for PC, with 4K graphics and ray-tracing, the whole enchilada. Everyone come take a look before Nintendo’s lawyers strip it ...
GameSpot may get a commission from retail offers. Nintendo has never been shy about sending legal challenges to fan-projects based on their intellectual property, and the unofficial PC port of Super ...
TorrentFreak reported on the actions taken against the fan-made project and said the claims levied against were reportedly organized by Wildwood Law Group LLC. The site said the law firm is known to ...
Last weekend, a big project had finally been made for public use. A port of Super Mario 64 had made its way to PCs thanks to a recompilation project that had fans reverse engineer the game's source ...