Nintendo nukes fan-made super mario 64 HD browser game

4.5
In recent days gaming fans worldwide have enjoyed playing an amazing in-browser fan recreation of the Nintendo classic Super Mario 64. The full HD offering has proven itself a huge hit but the party is now over. Following a compliant to Cloudflare by Nintendo, the main hosting page has been pulled offline.

While 3D games had been around for a couple of decades prior to its release, the launch of Super Mario 64 alongside Nintendo’s then flagship console N64 in 1996 was a gaming moment to behold.

Coupled with its revolutionary controller, the N64’s hardware placed flesh on Mario’s traditional 2D bones, bringing the iconic character into the 3D world in a way no other game had previously managed.

Little wonder then that the gaming media was filled with delight late last week when news broke that the game’s most iconic level had been recreated by developer Roystan Ross.

Not only had Bob-Omb Battlefield been brought back to life in full HD, but also via the Unity Engine meaning that players were given the first ever chance to play the game via a web browser – a black magic achievement by 1996 standards.

But just as dozens of stories were heralding the return of the king, Nintendo has gatecrashed the party and shut down the fun.

In a complaint sent by Nintendo of America via attorneys at the Miller Nash Graham & Dunn LLP lawfirm, the game company has ordered CDN outfit Cloudflare to disable access to the site hosting the popular browser version of the game.

“The copyrighted work at issue is Nintendo’s Super Mario 64 video game (U.S. Copyright Reg. No. PA0000788138), including but not limited to the audiovisual work, computer program, music, and fictional character depictions,” the company told Cloudflare.

“The web site at http://mario64-erik.u85.net/Web.html displays, and allows users to play, an electronic game that makes unauthorized use of copyright-protected features of Nintendo’s Super Mario 64 video game. Nintendo requests that CloudFlare, Inc. immediately disable public access to http://mario64-erik.u85.net/Web.html.”

In an email to the person operating the server (not Ross himself), Cloudflare said that it had revealed the name of the actual host to Nintendo’s lawyers and forwarded the complaint to the host itself.

“We have provided the name of your hosting provider to the reporter. Additionally, we have forwarded this complaint to your hosting provider as well,” Cloudflare advised.

The complaint from Nintendo was enough to take the browser version immediately offline.

“Thank you for forwarding the request to me. I was hosting this work for a good friend who is an avid fan, and built the project from scratch as a tech demo. As mentioned on the original blog post, and noted in various big name media press, there is no intention to monetize this, ever,” the hoster told Cloudflare.

“All back-end properties hosting the original files have been updated and files removed. I trust that the issue is fully rectified.”

But while the browser edition is now well and truly offline following Cloudflare’s intervention, the desktop versions remain available hosted by Mediafire and with mirrors provided by Microsoft.



Posted:
Related Forum: Gaming Discussion

Source: http://torrentfreak.com/nintendo-nukes-fan-made-super-mario-64-hd-1503131/

Comments

"Nintendo nukes fan-made super mario 64 HD browser game" :: Login/Create an Account :: 45 comments

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codsturePosted:

Wokze Damn, all that time spent ruined by nintendo.


the creators still have the game its just not a public thing anymore

codsturePosted:

Musket Nintendo should have allowed him to make it, The game is old enough and he isn't making any money off of it.


they were making money by the ad's they had running on the site

codsturePosted:

Taillights Damn, all that time spent ruined by nintendo.

they had to delete it because the people that made it were making money off of things they didn't originally make

codsturePosted:

pitythefool It really is pretty dumb when companies like nintendo do this. This guy recreated 1 level of super mario 64 (not completely, no red coins, no shark/dog thing) and it didn't even have stars or anything. Honestly it really wasn't causing any harm.

I just don't get why they had to pull the plug. This really didn't hurt anything, it was more like free advertisement. Nintendo is being a little ridiculous here.



they had to pull the plug because the people that made it were making money off of things they didn't originally make

L33t-Ninja-MuchPosted:

this actually played very good i liked it

TaigaAisakaPosted:

Taillights Damn, all that time spent ruined by nintendo.


I wouldn't say the time spent on it is ruined or wasted. I'm more than certain the developer(s) have saved their work on the game. On top of that, there are still links to download and play the game. Now, I'm not sure if this was ever going to become a full game or not, but if it wasn't, then I wouldn't say time was wasted as it was finished if there wasn't going to be a full game.

COYBPosted:

Pisarczykowski
bdgr this just looks appalling just wow


Sorry, If it looks appalling but these games were actually fun unlike most games now you ignorant asshole


Jesus calm down he was only stating his opinion.

JesusOnAGoatPosted:

bdgr this just looks appalling just wow


Sorry, If it looks appalling but these games were actually fun unlike most games now you ignorant asshole

bdgrPosted:

this just looks appalling just wow

RedPosted:

Detached Nintendo are just being ignorant bitches in my opinion.


No, they are hoping someone will still play on Nintendo and they would lose money if hemade the full game and sold it. Smart move IMO.