No ad to show here.

Nintendo issues takedown notices for fan-made Pokemon game

It’s been in the pipeline for nine years according to developers, but Nintendo has quickly acted on a new fan-made Pokemon game.

Pokemon Uranium was released earlier this month, offering eight gyms, over 150 new species of Pokemon and online functionality.

No ad to show here.

The game went on to be downloaded over 1.5 million times, the developers said. Unfortunately for them, Nintendo’s legal team has issued several takedown notices.

“While we have not personally been contacted, it’s clear what their wishes are, and we respect those wishes deeply,” the developers wrote in a statement on the Pokemon Uranium website.

The team explained that they would no longer be providing download links to the game on their website.

“We have no connection to fans who reupload the game files to their own hosts, and we cannot verify that those download links are all legitimate. We advise you to be extremely cautious about downloading the game from unofficial sources.”

Read more: Nintendo NX leaks – how powerful is the Nvidia Tegra X1?

The team also thanked fans for their support, saying they were “blown away” by the response to their creation.

Unfortunately, Pokemon Uranium isn’t the only fan-made video game to feel Nintendo’s wrath this month, as a project to remake Metroid 2 was affected as well.

The developer behind Project AM2R, received takedown notices from the Japanese video game firm earlier this month.

“Please, don’t hate Nintendo for all of this. It’s their legal obligation to protect their IP. Instead of sending hate mail, get the original M2 [Metroid 2 – ed] from the eShop. Show them that 2D adventure platformers are still a thing people want,” the developer wrote.

The developer has however confirmed that he’ll still be working on updates/fixes for the title.

No ad to show here.

More

News

Sign up to our newsletter to get the latest in digital insights. sign up

Welcome to Memeburn

Sign up to our newsletter to get the latest in digital insights.

Exit mobile version