Yeah, the way Nintendo treats fans and fanwork is just... ugh. They need to remember every time they throw a cease and desist order in someone's face over something minor that was just as a fun tribute with no intention to profit from it, other fans are watching, Steam's having a sale, and someone's buying the next PlayStation and XBox. Some who get pushed to cross over to the other side may never come back. Where they once hosted a Smash Bros tournament could be hosting Call of Duty instead. Where they once threw a cease and desist at someone creating a fangame based on a franchise may become the next beloved indie developer instead.
It's like the music industry putting tight restrictions on who can hear which particular songs and how they can be played. If you constantly keep something like that under such tight restriction and unyielding legal scrutiny, no one will ever hear it, buy it, or ever talk about it. I can't tell you how many songs and albums I've purchased because someone had the song in something they created, even though it wasn't legal for them to have used it in the context it was used but I liked what I heard and decided to buy it. Those who strip that accessibility for legal reasons because they felt so entitled to do so only end up hurting themselves.


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