Nintendo Updates User Agreement; Reserves The Right To Brick Your Switch Console

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Nintendo has quietly introduced sweeping changes to its user agreement, giving itself the right to permanently disable user accounts and consoles found to be engaging in hacking, piracy, or other unauthorised activities. First spotted by Game File, the new terms – effective on 7 May 2025 – mark the most substantial update to the agreement since 2021 and reflect the company’s increasingly aggressive stance on protecting its hardware and software ecosystem.

The updated agreement now explicitly states that if a user violates its rules, Nintendo may “render the Nintendo Account Services and/or the applicable Nintendo device permanently unusable in whole or in part.” While the company has not defined what “unusable” means, the language strongly suggests it could remotely disable (or “brick”) consoles suspected of tampering or misuse.

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Image: Nintendo

Previously, Nintendo’s policy only barred users from reverse-engineering or modifying its software without permission. The revised terms go much further, forbidding a wide range of activities including decrypting, bypassing, tampering with, or otherwise circumventing any function or protection within its Account Services. Additionally, installing or using unauthorised software or hardware is now explicitly prohibited.

These changes arrive just weeks ahead of the anticipated launch of the Nintendo Switch 2 on 5 June 2025. The new console is expected to shift more heavily towards digital downloads, increasing the company’s sensitivity to piracy and unauthorised software modifications. As such, the move is seen as a pre-emptive measure to tighten control over its next-generation platform.

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Image: CNET

Nintendo has historically taken a firm line against piracy and emulation, targeting sites that host ROMs of its classic games and threatening legal action against emulator developers. The new agreement signals an escalation in those efforts, providing the company a direct method to penalise users at the device level.

Moreover, the updated privacy policy also introduces broader surveillance powers. Nintendo notes that it may now monitor online chats to detect violations of the agreement and to ensure a “safe and family-friendly online environment,” adding another layer of enforcement to its expanding terms. In a statement to Game File, the company confirmed that it will only review video and audio recording as part of its user-report system.

(Source: Game File)

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