Super Smash Bros. fans are sounding the alarm over Nintendo's strict new community tournament guidelines, which could indeed be devastating to local organizers and competitors.
Both Nintendo UK and Nintendo Japan have published updated rules for community tournaments that will significantly limit what can and can't be used in local events. Curiously, Nintendo of America has yet to follow suit, but Smash Bros. fans are nonetheless distraught over what the changes could mean for the unofficial competitive scene.
The new community guidelines put hard limits on how many participants can take part, how much money organizers can charge (no more than it costs to set up the tournament), and how much money can be won. Moreover, the rules disallow the use of any pirated or modified software in tournaments - seemingly cutting off mega-popular mods like Project M and Project+ - and dictate that any online component must use Nintendo's official servers. Sponsors are also prohibited as part of Nintendo Europe and Nintendo Japan's new tournament rules.
In what I can only perceive as a petty gesture, Nintendo also prohibits "the sale of food, beverages, or merchandise" in these small-scale events. C'mon, Nintendo, if a Smash Bros. tournament doesn't reek of stale pizza and Mountain Dew, is it even a Smash Bros. tournament?
Another guideline I found concerning and amusing in equal parts says tournaments can't "involve anything that Nintendo deems inappropriate." I just have to ask: if serving food and beverages falls under Nintendo's definition of inappropriate, what else might organizers be dinged for?
"I don’t want to be doomer about this but uh, it’s over," said Reddit user Eldritch_Skirmisher
"What everyone had feared has happened,"
Read more on gamesradar.com