The Pokémon Company has denied claims that it has an issue with content creators performing ‘Nuzlocke runs’ of its games, amid allegations that it has previously removed creators from its content programme for doing so.
It was recently claimed by Kit Ellis and Krysta Yang, the previous co-hosts of official Nintendo YouTube show Nintendo Minute, that The Pokémon Company was strongly against their suggestion that they do a Nuzlocke run.
A Nuzlocke run is a playthrough of the game that can have numerous rules, but the main two are a ‘permadeath’ rule (in which if a Pokémon faints it must be released) and a rule that players can only catch the first wild Pokémon they encounter in each area, and no others.
However, Ellis and Yang claim that they were told such rules were as frowned upon as ROM hacking, something The Pokémon Company has now denied.
In a statement made to Serebii site owner Joe Merrick, The Pokémon Company International said: “We do not have any issues with fans/creators playing the games with Nuzlocke rules.”
As part of a viewer Q&A in a YouTube video posted last week, Ellis and Yang were asked if they’d ever tried a Nuzlocke run of the game.
“We thought this would be a great idea for a Nintendo Minute video,” Ellis said. “So we pitched it to the Pokémon Company saying ‘hey, we would like to do a Nuzlocke run, what do you think’. They said ‘here’s what we think, BAM’,” punching his hand.
“We thought they were going to fire us,” Yang added.
Ellis explained: “They said ‘we consider this to be on the same level as using a hacked game, ROM hacks’. I was like, excuse me? This is the style of playing a game that everybody can buy, there’s no hacking.”
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