Some people complains that there are too many ports/remasters/remakes around but I agree that not being able to have older game legally is another issue.Or it might get more popular, since companies (ahem ahem Nintendo ahem) hate reselling their old games on new platforms for some reason.
iirc, the issue with Yuzu was that they were pay walling stuff, and playing too loose with the piracy side. it was hubris of the dev team that took them down. N was overly hungry to take action, but there's a reason that happened, and has barely happened since, and not all the blame can be put solely on N.Nintendo finding a legal loophole to make emulators themselves illegal (like they did with Yuzu, kinda)
I've read something regarding the ability to run TotK or Echoes of Wisdom (unless that was for Ryujinx) before it came out.iirc, the issue with Yuzu was that they were pay walling stuff, and playing too loose with the piracy side. it was hubris of the dev team that took them down. N was overly hungry to take action, but there's a reason that happened, and has barely happened since, and not all the blame can be put solely on N.
I always facepalm each time a video game journalist site posts an article of the "this Zelda under Unreal Engine looks gorgeous and is what fans always wanted to play".The most harmful things that happen are stupid memes under Nintendo tweets about "the 3DS is super easy to mod" those type of posts are so incredibly damaging. Wish people knew how to keep a low profile.
Nothing can get rid of on the internet. It's just impossible. Companies might make it hard to get, but nothing will truly be lost on the internet. There will be at least one person who has a copy fo such and if they have the tools, they can back it up and whatnot. If not, then the other person could do it.how long will the remaining ROM sharing websites stay alive for?
This unfortunately isn't as true as people claim, in general.Nothing can get rid of on the internet. It's just impossible. Companies might make it hard to get, but nothing will truly be lost on the internet. There will be at least one person who has a copy fo such and if they have the tools, they can back it up and whatnot. If not, then the other person could do it.
Great advice and not just for roms.the best practice is to never centralize anything.
This is a great example of not having things centralized, if those videos were uploaded to other places then purging them wouldn't be an issue because there'd always be backups somewhere else.This unfortunately isn't as true as people claim, in general.
A pretty good example is Youtube, as there are countless Youtube series and videos (not just old ones at that) that are just wiped from the face of the earth because people didn't back them up before they were taken down for various reasons.
Granted, we're talking about video games and I would assume it's probably a bit more well-tended area than random Youtube videos, but still.
It's the best realization I've had from seeing site after site, service after service get axed.Great advice and not just for roms.