Yuzu Emulator Settles Major Lawsuit with Nintendo, Agrees to Pay $2.4 Million
In a surprising turn of events, the creators of the popular Switch emulator, Yuzu, have agreed to settle a major lawsuit filed against them by Nintendo. The settlement requires Yuzu to pay $2.4 million in monetary relief and cease all activities related to the emulator. This decision comes as a blow to the emulator’s dedicated community of users and developers.
Yuzu and its team have always maintained that they were against piracy and created the emulator out of their passion for Nintendo and its consoles. However, they now acknowledge that their software has inadvertently led to extensive piracy. Users have been able to play games outside of authorized hardware, leaking game content before its release and ruining the experience for legitimate purchasers and fans.
The proposed settlement fully accepts Nintendo’s claim that Yuzu is primarily designed to circumvent Nintendo’s copy protection and play Nintendo Switch games using unauthorized copies of cryptographic keys. While Yuzu itself does not include these keys, it functions only when these keys are integrated without authorization. This violation of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act has prompted the settlement.
It is worth noting that Yuzu’s ability to run a wide range of Switch homebrew programs could have complicated the legal battle. While Yuzu argued that non-infringing uses for the emulator exist, Nintendo claimed that the majority of Yuzu users were playing downloaded pirated games. This fact could have worked against Yuzu in court, even if there were legitimate uses for the emulator.
The settlement comes at a significant expense for Tropic Haze LLC, the US company coordinating Patreon donations for Yuzu’s development. With a monthly income of around $30,000, the $2.4 million settlement poses a financial burden. However, the developers believe that this figure is a reasonable reflection of the damages, attorneys’ fees, and costs that could have been awarded at trial.
The potential attorneys’ fees required to bring the case to trial likely influenced the quick settlement. Yuzu’s developers may not have had the financial resources to fight a lengthy legal battle. As a result, they have chosen to end support for the emulator and shut down their code repositories, Patreon accounts, Discord servers, and websites.
Yuzu’s developers also faced allegations of aiding and acknowledging potential Switch pirates through various communication channels. This included boasting about successfully emulating leaked Switch games before their official release. These allegations may have played a role in the settlement and could have implications for other emulator developers, such as Ryujinx, who have yet to face legal action from Nintendo.
While emulator programs are generally protected by US legal precedents, console makers can bring DMCA actions against emulators that rely on cryptographic keys to break copy protection. However, emulator makers believe that lawsuits are less likely to be brought against emulators for systems that are no longer selling new hardware or software in significant numbers.
Nintendo has a history of aggressively defending its copyrighted works, targeting fangames, ROM distribution sites, and hardware modders in the past. While direct legal action against emulator makers has been less common, Nintendo did take steps to prevent the Wii/Gamecube emulator Dolphin from appearing on Steam last year.
The settlement between Yuzu and Nintendo marks a significant moment in the ongoing battle between console makers and emulator developers. It remains to be seen how this will impact the future of emulation and whether other emulator projects will face similar legal challenges.