The Pokémon Company y Nintendo They have always made sure that all the games in the saga are for all audiences. They are very colorful titles, with a peaceful soundtrack and a very complex competitive background that It will be where the most veterans move. However, using an emote with a Pokémon on Twitch has given a streamer problems, and Twitch has immediately removed it. What happened?
No, It has not been Nintendo or TPC protecting their intellectual propertiesit was Twitch itself that said that this icon shows “sexual content or nudity, naked torsos and bodily fluids”. Brutally specific if you ask me. These have been the reasons that Twitch defends for having banned the emote, completely disconcerting the creator and the community of content creators.
EXCUSE ME???? Twitch this is literally what Bonsly looks like??????????? pic.twitter.com/oDdxNwbRBn
— SBCoop (@SBCoop89) February 5, 2024
The affected person has been el streamer SBCoopand their sin has been Activate a Bonsly Pokémon icon in your chat. This cute bonsai-shaped Pokémon has a hole in the bottom of its… body? Pot? Twitch seems to have confused that hole with what you can already imagine, but that “hollowness” is present in the official designs of the Pokémon. In fact, the picture Matches the official Bonsly Pokémon card design.
Official designs, censored
Several streamers and content creators joined the Twitter thread to report problems with Twitch’s “automatic censorship.” In this case we are talking about an official design, it has not even been modified to make it more “bannable”.
SBCoop has already contacted Twitch directly to try to reverse the ban and reactivate the icon. The tears of the icon will be the “body fluids” who has banned Twitch and Bonsly’s bottom hole, the “nudity” mentioned in the warning. Are all the trees bare for Twitch? Is crying on streaming “exposing bodily fluids”? Too many questions.
2024-02-10 19:08:40
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