Nintendo hacker Gary Bowser has denied being involved in a new flash cart project claimed to allow Switch users to play back-ups of their owned games.
The MIG-Switch flash cart, officially, is a «third party back-up and development device for the Nintendo Switch» according to the device website, that's not endorsed nor licenced by Nintendo of Japan. While the idea behind the device is players can back up games they own legally, it also opens the door for piracy and for people to potentially play roms of games they do not own.
However, Bowser — who was sentenced to 40 months in prison for the distribution and sale of piracy-enabling devices back in 2022 — said he was «not involved» in any aspect of the MIG-Switch. Rather, the hacker reportedly said he had been the «subject of DNS poisoning attack on [his] nameservers» (thanks, VGC).
In a post on Discord, Bowser wrote: «I repaired the damage and changed all my passwords, but sadly people will talk, not what I needed just before Christmas… And also just a day after someone was threatening me via Skype, demanding I send them $1,000 per month for the next 40 months, or they would leak a bunch of shit.»
He finished: «I am not going to engage the trolls or comment on it.»
The hacker also proclaimed his lack of involvement on X (formerly Twitter). When asked directly if he was part of the flash cart project, Bowser replied bluntly: «I am not involved with this stuff».
The accusations come after Bowser's website was allegedly discovered in the DNS records of AfterTimeX.com, the website where videos of MIG-Switch first appeared, as explained in a video by Modern Vintage Gamer.
I am not involved with this stuff.
Bowser himself was released from prison last year. However, despite
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