News

So the emulators themselves may not actually violate intellectual property rights. But many emulators, including Yuzu, require an encryption key and/or system firmware from a Nintendo Switch.
Nintendo has initiated legal action against the developers of Yuzu in a US federal court, aiming to permanently cease the emulator's operations. While Nintendo isn't accusing Yuzu of directly ...
Nintendo has sued the team behind the Yuzu emulator (as spotted by Bloomberg ‘s Stephen Totilo), claiming that the program unlawfully circumvents Nintendo’s encryption and enables piracy.
Nintendo's lawsuit against Yuzu's developers targets piracy facilitation via software encryption circumvention. Legal action seeks not just damages but complete emulator shutdown to protect ...
Nintendo Switch emulator pioneer Yuzu has reportedly settled the emulation lawsuit from Nintendo, agreeing to pay $2.4 million as well as giving up everything related to Nintendo Switch emulation.
Nintendo is suing the developers of the popular Yuzu emulator for Nintendo Switch, alleging massive copyright violations.
The crux of Nintendo's argument is the allegation that Yuzu is primarily designed to break the several layers of Switch encryption so users can play copyrighted Nintendo games.
Zinger Key Points Nintendo is suing Yuzu emulator developers for enabling illegal game downloads, seeking $150,000 per copyright infringement The suit alleges Yuzu allows users to play Switch ...
Nintendo has started a high-stakes legal battle with Tropic Haze LLC, the developers of the Yuzu emulator, in a move that has shocked the gaming community. The gaming giant has accused this ...
One of the most popular Nintendo Switch emulators that's still in active development arrives on Android shortly after Nintendo shuts down its rival.