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Thread: Raid Reveals Illegally Pirated Nintendo DS Discs Containing £6,000-Worth Of Games

                  
   
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    NDS Raid Reveals Illegally Pirated Nintendo DS Discs Containing £6,000-Worth Of Games

    Massive pirate operation smashed in Sunday market raid.

    Thursday 10th April/... Illegally copied Nintendo DS games stored on discs marked ‘Volume 9 DS Games’ (the disc) were recovered as part of an 85,000 disc haul at an East Yorkshire Sunday market raid turned out to be the first of their kind seized in the UK for the Nintendo DS, ELSPA forensic experts today revealed.

    Recovered at the Walton Street market, based in Hull, it transpires that the discs contained approximately 200 current games for the Nintendo DS.

    According to ELSPA’s forensic experts, the disc is the first of its kind discovered in the UK. It has been appearing for approximately four-to-six weeks, but no Nintendo DS discs such as those seized at Hull’s Walton market have previously been found.

    The raid, part of a collaborative effort to clampdown on the increased presence of counterfeited goods at the market, was carried out by officers from Hull CID, Hull Trading Standards, the Riverside NPT (Neighbourhood Patrol Team), ELSPA (the Entertainment Leisure And Software Publishers’ Association) IP Crime Unit, MCPS (Mechanical Copyright Protection Society), and representatives from Adidas and Nike worked together to identify illegally copied games, music and counterfeit clothes.

    The approximate value of the software on the disc, should a member of the public purchase it in a High Street shop, is £6,000.

    A number of people were interviewed by local Trading Standards officers after being found selling counterfeit clothing and footwear and will be prosecuted. Part of the operation involved the confiscation of counterfeited goods from traders who fled from the market, leaving their stalls and stock behind as officers entered the market.

    John Hillier, who heads up ELSPA’s crime unit, said: “Piracy costs the games industry dear – just like that of any other entertainment industry. Making good and inventive games is an expensive and creative process, with some titles today costing £20m or more to develop. To make a quality title involves teams of highly skilled professionals, from programmers and graphic artists to voice actors and musicians. When a pirate sells illegally copied games they undermine the viability of our industry. The worst-case scenario is that pirate activity could cost the jobs of some of the creative talent and that would be a catastrophe.

    “There are other things which the public should be made aware of about counterfeit games. Some of them will damage hardware, such as PS3, Xbox 360 and Wii consoles. Others will not play in PCs and consoles at all or, if they do, the quality of the graphics or gameplay mechanics may be impaired. Finally, pirated software comes with no quality assurance – so if the games do not play properly then retailers and publishers will not replace them.”

    Michael Rawlinson, managing director of ELSPA, said: “Walton Street has recently been plagued by criminals selling illegally copied games, music and clothing. ELSPA would like to thank local Trading Standards and all other attending authorities for their efforts in stamping out illegal products from the marketplace and helping protect legitimate traders.”

    Det. Sgt Reed of Hull CID, said: “We have made big inroads into the market now and it is our intention to keep raiding it. We’re going to meet with Trading Standards and see whether we can make this a regular thing.”

    Mike Pindar, Trading Standards officer for Hull City County Council, said: “Local traders have gone out of business as a result of these counterfeiters and people who buy from them. The people who lose out are the retailers and the public. We’re going to be very active on counterfeiting and it is only a matter of time before these people receive a visit from the police and ourselves.”

    A spokesman for entertainment chain HMV said piracy was costing the industry “hundreds of millions of pounds”. He added: “If people visit record stores they will find the price of DVDs and CDs has come down so significantly there is no reason for people to pay a couple of pounds less for pirate copies, which are low quality and support criminals

  2. #2

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    this is just stupid. i doubt i would buy any of the games i downloaded (i currently own 13 ds game's,). if i download and try a game that i like, i buy it. if i don't like it, screw it. i like to call it "try before you buy!".

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    rofl D: . I just think that nintendo are greedy. They probably lose more money than they would if they left it because it takes a lot more money to stop these things. it must take millions to stop this type of thing happening

    SOLUTION: Put in jail the suppliers, not the sellers (fine them) and make an example of the people who sell them, soon people will start to realize that its not worth it and they themselves (not Nintendo) are being greedy.

    The person who originally created a passcard did this for the intention of homebrew and some stupid Chinese companies ripped it off.

    Spoiler!

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    Lol nice spolier I totally agree with you stevo <3
    I don't go on here much anymore. Find me on GBAtemp.


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    Quote Originally Posted by mr game porter View Post
    this is just stupid. i doubt i would buy any of the games i downloaded (i currently own 13 ds game's,). if i download and try a game that i like, i buy it. if i don't like it, screw it. i like to call it "try before you buy!".
    Haha I sort of agree, but not everyone is like that. However, I still think that oftentimes the people who pirate games wouldn't buy all the games they pirate anyway. And I'm kind of curious about how they managed to fit 200 DS games onto one cart, either they were crappy tiny games or it was a really high capacity cartridge, which is pretty interesting.

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    Quote Originally Posted by iofthestorm View Post
    And I'm kind of curious about how they managed to fit 200 DS games onto one cart, either they were crappy tiny games or it was a really high capacity cartridge, which is pretty interesting.
    It's probably a DVD. They're cheap, and can hold that many games, I'm guessing a lot of 8MB and 16MB titles.

  7. #7

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    gulible fools... if only they payed the £30 asking price for hit games such as elf bowling and high school musical... then people wouldn't be in this situation

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    More likely it was a CD-R since it only contained 200 ROM images. A single layer DVD should've easily been able to hold a helluvalot more ROM images than 200, as the VAST majority of DS titles are shovelware weighing in at a few megabytes apiece, and even quite a few of the decent games are fairly small, e.g. Etrian Odyssey.

  9. #9

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    Biggest criminals are the software/game developers. How can Nintendo and others justify charging £30.00 for a game. Looking at .nds files freely available all over the net some range from 132 mb half decent game and game play/graphics to something like 8mb (crapy game). Our kids have 2 DS lites ( and R4 homebrew cards). More and more multi player games out now and some needing 2 carts, not many kids or familys can afford to be paying out £60 for 2 of the exact same carts. If we were to pay for all the games that they keep advertising then we would have to take out a bank loan.

    I suspect someone tipped off police after they bought a genuine game and then got cheesed off after paying out £30 when they realise they could have got 200 games for £10.

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