Nintendo has been deleting Mario Maker courses for months without explanation, and the community is tired. The company updated its Mario Maker support page today with new guidelines, but it doesnât have many answers.
âA Course I Uploaded Seems to Have Disappeared. Where Did it Go?â reads the support page, in which the company declares it may âsometimes have to delete courses from Course World.â (Course World is where player-created levels live.)
Nintendo then outlines four reasons for a course being deleted.
1) When a level isnât played much or hasnât been recommended (âstarredâ). (This isnât new.) âAfter a fixed period of time, courses with low stars/plays will be automatically deleted from the server,â said the company.
The problem? Nintendo doesnât provide a threshold for levels to meet, nor a timeline for when levels are removed. If people knew âhey, Iâve gotta make sure this course gets starred five times,â it would help. Nintendoâs perspective might be that people would just beg others for stars, but that already happens, and right now, potentially great levels are removed for no good reason.
2) Bugs. This makes sense, and I donât think anyone is OK with exploits:
âCourses that include bugs that were unintended by either the course creator or the developers will be deleted. Itâs important that we remove levels with bugs quickly, because letting these levels remain in Course World can lead to negative outcomes for many players such as players experiencing levels in unfair ways that the original course creator did not intend, or re-writing âWorld Recordâ times.â
Even though Nintendo recently changed how P Switches work in Mario Maker, they didnât remove stages that required P Switch jumps, so thatâs not a âbug.â
3) Players canât request for their level to get starred. We already knew this one, as well; Nintendo outlined it in an old set of patch notes. âUsers are unable to use words âLikeâ, âYeah!â, and the ââ â symbol in their course names,â the company recommended. âPlease change the course name when saving a course that includes these words.â Begging is annoying, so this is fine!
4) Levels can disappear over what Nintendo deems âinappropriate content.â âCourses that contain something inappropriate, such as offensive language or phrases will be deleted,â the company said.
It did not, however, convey what it means by âinappropriate,â which is a key distinction with Nintendo. Theyâre a family-friendly company whose standards for âinappropriateâ may very well be different than others. Why else would they remove a bunch of levels with the word âpooâ in them?Is that âinappropriateâ?
Though these guidelines are appreciated, they donât fundamentally fix whatâs wrong with Nintendoâs approach to policing Mario Maker. When a level is removed, Nintendo canât tell you why. If you want to fix the problem, if thereâs an âinappropriateâ level name, thereâs no way to re-upload the level after itâs deleted. Nintendo canât reinstate the stage, nor can you re-upload it yourself.
Nintendo can have whatever rules it wants for Mario Maker; itâs their game! But if they want to foster an active community in the months and years ahead, they need to communicate with that community. Right now, that hasnât changed. If players were told âyour level was removed because it wasnât played enough, consider some edits and re-uploading!â or âyour level was removed due to the presence of inappropriate language in the level title,â itâd be a different story.
Whether itâs Mario Maker levels or an inability to explain why theyâre changing their Japanese games in translation, Nintendoâs silence continues to hurt them.