You can now listen to the official Pokemon Diamond & Pearl soundtracks. All previous recordings available on sites like YouTube were unofficial, although they sounded perfectly fine to me. Nintendo, however, didn’t seem to think so, as they sent one curator of Nintendo’s music a grand total of 3,500 copyright strikes.
Head to this site here to listen to every song played in Pokemon Diamond & Pearl. You can even download them alongside most of the game's sound effects. The site has quite a few warnings against using any of these files for commercial use and also warns that using them in TV, radio, podcasts, other games, or pretty much anything other than listening to them quietly by yourself is prohibited.
Related: Pokemon Brilliant Diamond and Shining Pearl: Best Ground-Type Moves
Oh, you can apparently also play the Pokemon music as "entrance background music for sports games," so I guess we can expect to see the Los Angeles Rams take the field to the tune of Diamond & Pearl during The Big Game. But probably not--there’s way too much money in the Superbowl for Nintendo to let something like that slide.
The site isn't exactly as user-friendly as other media sites, such as YouTube, but Nintendo has spent years trying to stop people from hosting its music. GilvaSunner, who until just recently ran a YouTube channel that hosted thousands of songs from various Nintendo games, recently got struck with 3,500 copyright notices that forced them to terminate their channel rather than deal with them all.
It's just the latest example of Nintendo zealously guarding its intellectual property. Remember that fan game where you get to shoot Pikachu in the head? It's dead now. So is that Metroid Prime fan project. Nintendo even shut
Read more on thegamer.com