“The Legend of Zelda Kingdom Tears” has recently been found to be sneaking away. However, in China, where Nintendo can’t reach, another war has been staged: the war between genuine players and pirated players, and because some people have started to report, people are worried that it will cause party attention.
No matter how strong the legal team is, it won’t hesitate to encounter places where the rule of law is not respected. Chinese pirate players are playing “Legend of Zelda Kingdom Tears” unabashedly, and have even started live broadcasts and started business. This led to considerable dissatisfaction among genuine players, and sparked a debate between the two factions on the forum with pirated players.
Some pirated players who were sprayed by genuine players were quite dissatisfied, so some people threatened to report to the Chinese government. Since 99% of foreign games have not passed the review, if they are targeted by the authorities, this kind of Hong Kong version of “gray games” will at least be blocked on various online shopping platforms. Even if both buyers and sellers are willing to take risks, they have to use All kinds of lingo can communicate. To put it simply, I want these genuine players not to play.
A recent example of this in China is the “Brother Stealing Disk” incident in “Evil Castle 4 RE”. The stealer wanted to play genuine movies for free, so after purchasing the game on an online shopping platform, he threatened the seller to report him for selling smuggled games.
This incident caused a shock in the parallel import circle at the time, and many sellers did not dare to sell “Evil Castle 4” anymore, fearing that they would be reported if they followed suit. Follow-up also triggered controversy such as cyberbullying and stealing.
Will The Legend of Zelda Kingdom Tears get the same treatment? Maybe we’ll find out when it goes on sale next week. However, for Taiwanese players, they really have to be careful of plot thunder from the other side recently.