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Major gaming crackdown blocks millions of console owners from playing top titles for free using dangerous loophole

Major gaming crackdown blocks millions of console owners from playing top titles for free using dangerous loophole

Scottish Sun6 days ago
Users who fall foul of the rules could end up with their console being bricked
GAME OVER Major gaming crackdown blocks millions of console owners from playing top titles for free using dangerous loophole
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SEVEN websites used by millions to illegally obtain popular games for free has been shut down in a major crackdown by the FBI.
For more than four years, players were able to obtain pirated copies of upcoming titles days or weeks before official release.
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Sites including nsw2u have gone offline
Credit: Getty
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FBI warning issued on all seven sites
Credit: FBI
Between February and May this year, there were 3.2million downloads on the sites alone.
It's estimated that the operation resulted a loss of $170million / £126million to the gaming industry.
The seven sites specifically made Nintendo Switch ROMs available, which users download and play from a hacked console or PC emulator.
A message saying that the website "has been seized" by the FBI now appears on all of them.
"This domain has been seized by the Federal Bureau of Investigation in accordance with seizure warrant issued pursuant to 18 U.S.C §§ 2323 issued by the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia," it reads.
The seven sites that have been shut down are:
nsw2u.com
nswdl.com
game-2u.com
bigngame.com
ps4pkg.com
ps4pkg.net
mgnetu.com
Nintendo recently beef up its rules threatening to render consoles "unusable" if they're found to be loading illegal software on them.
The firm's user agreement states that you must not "bypass, modify, decrypt, defeat, tamper with, or otherwise circumvent any of the functions or protections of the Nintendo Account Services" or it may "render the Console and/or Software permanently unusable".
Nintendo has also sued illegal ROM-sharing websites too.
Last year, Tropic Haze, a popular Yuzu Nintendo Switch emulator developer, agreed to pay the the company $2.4million.
The Sun tries new Nintendo Switch 2 and Mario Kart before it's out
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