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We’ve reached out to Nintendo to ask about the situation regarding tool-assisted Super Mario videos online, and will update this post should we hear anything back. In the past, Nintendo’s approach to YouTube has been criticized by prominent YouTubers such as Pewdiepie for not being mutually beneficial enough.

This new wrinkle is tricky because, well, Nintendo is within their full right to take down videos of this nature, especially if they involve games that were never purchased (worth noting that some TAS speedrunners do runs on actual carts, though). At the same time, players like Alex have devoted years to showing off what makes classic Nintendo games great, sometimes even raising money for charity at speedrunning events. Entire communities have formed around tool-assisted speedruns, and video is one of the major ways these communities show off their work.

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“Yes I respect Nintendo, and yes I still plan on playing Mario Maker and making ridiculously hard levels there,” Alex said. “But it is a shame that if us content creators do want to showcase and display our levels to the public, then we are restricted to do it on Super Mario Maker instead of the way we have always done.”