
Nintendo of America recently filed two lawsuits in relation to Switch consoles being hacked. According to Polygon, the company are attempting to fight back against resellers who create and sell software to play pirated games on the console.

Cole Young almost made the jump from movie newcomer to game canon in Mortal Kombat 1, but a last-minute time crunch shut it down.

A rare first-party Nintendo games sale has just gone live on Amazon with around a dozen of the company's titles discounted.

Square Enix launches Final Fantasy X 25th anniversary site, revealing new Nomura art, books, music releases, and merchandise.
Look I know VIII has its issues and all that but how on earth can the do big anniversary events with new artwork and merchandise for VII, IX and X yet VIII got sweet f*** all.
They could have given it something during its 25th anniversary yet all it got was a single Happy Anniversary post on their social media.
hacking the Switch itself is legal as no Nintendo's IP is being used there. the system is just so easy to hack but yeah...playing pirated games (which tbh, the main reason many hack the system in the first place) is illegal but we've seen attempts made in the past by many to stop piracy in many systems and yet here we are. good luck to Nintendo though
So Nintendo cares now since people are hacking the Switch but yet when people ask Nintendo and file a lawsuit against Nintendo to fix the joycon drift they sweep it under the rug wow. This isn't the first or the last time the Switch will ever be hacked sometimes the hacks improve something that comes stock out of the box.