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PewDiePie joins a group of prominent YouTube personalities that have criticized Nintendo's new revenue sharing rules. Those against the policy include Boogie2988 (video above), Ohmwrecker, and Jim ...
In response to the popularity of shared game clips, Let's Play videos and live streams, Nintendo launched a Creators Program that aimed to take a cut of the profits when people made content ...
Of course, it runs contrary to not just Nintendo’s entire history of fans sharing video from its games, but its policies in present day as well, where it’s a constant battle for content ...
We continually want our fans to enjoy sharing Nintendo content on YouTube, and that is why, unlike other entertainment companies, we have chosen not to block people using our intellectual property.
The new policy was outlined over on the Nintendo Creators Program page, where the company outlined how the revenue sharing system works for YouTubers who decide to opt-in. One of the updates to ...
Starting in 2013, Nintendo began claiming 100 percent of the ad revenue on videos with its content, which the new policy claims was “according to YouTube rules.” ...
Nintendo has reserved the right to render devices “permanently unusable” if users are filling them with pirated games. This aggressive anti-piracy measure comes as software piracy continues to ...
In the final days of our pre-Switch 2 world, Nintendo is trying to rethink how sharing games works.The biggest announcement from the company's latest Direct was its upcoming Virtual Game Cards ...
Nintendo recently launched a significant update for the Switch, introducing Virtual Game Cards as a way to share digital games with others. However, to counter this, Nintendo closed a loophole ...
Felix Kjellberg, the creator of the most subscribed channel on YouTube, has published a blog listing his concerns with Nintendo's new ad revenue sharing policy. Better known as PewDiePie to his 34 ...
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