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I've genuinely known people who stole from their friends and family's homes, and would give the same reasons that BlackJace pointed out - "the owner in question doesn't deserve it/are using the property improperly" are as common as justifications for theft as they come. That being said, people invoke those same post-hoc justifications for all sorts of behavior. I get exactly where BlackJace was coming from in calling to mind that particular segment of HBomb's video. I'm not saying that anyone has to agree that invoking that video was inappropriate. From my perspective, the reply that started this whole tangeant was written by a queer creator who felt that a video that is explicitly about how plagiarism marginalizes individual creators, and particularly queer creators, doesn't exactly 'ring true' as claimed in the context of this discussion - because, arguably, the observation that plagiarists and pirates have similar post-hoc justifications for their actions is superficial, and kind of not what the video is about. But I still think emulation is cool from a hobbyist and preservationist perspective (and no, I don't think emulating Tears of the Kingdom today is important to preservation).Ĭlick to shrink.It was a chain of bad reads, def (though some are worse than others - some of the replies to Fulcrum's post read like drunk-posting) and I respect your attempts to convince people to see the forest for the trees. I could probably go the rest of my life never acquiring access to another new free or paid game ever again and still never finish my backlog. As an adult where I have way more money than free time, I really don't need to pirate anything. As a teenager with a ton of free time and no money I thought it was amazing. I roll my eyes at people justifying pirating games like they're stealing loaves of bread to feed their starving family, but at the same time it's none of my business. But really, my advice is just mind your own business. My general feel is I understand that as an industry-friendly forum, it's important to either take a legitimate stance against piracy, or at least go through the motions of appearing to take a stance against piracy. So if you're arguing that yeah, you own TotK legally, but wanted to check it out on your 4K monitor with your fancy $5,000 supercomputer, there would occasionally be people skeptical of you having done all the necessary steps to hack a Switch and rip the game yourself. Like, even if you own a Switch and own digital/physical copy of the game, actually ripping the game content and system BIOS can be an annoying process that sometimes requires methods like having specific vulnerabilities only available in older hardware or other hardware mods. The issue is that being completely above board is often a pretty pain in the ass process.