![]() This is a very normal dynamic for Smash, where Nintendo does little to support but does not hurt the esports arena of their new Smash title. While Melee was being existentially threatened by Nintendo, the newest Smash title, Ultimate, wasn’t. Ahgren (humorously) outlines the PR strategy in the clip below. The Melee community wanted to test how far Nintendo would take their recent stance against ISO files and Slippi and to push the bad PR further. Melee commentator turned popular streamer, Ludwig Ahgren, quickly put out a very public notice that he’d be hosting an online charity tournament running Slippi. To follow up on the social media push, leading voices in the Melee community began organizing. The Melee wanted to make it clear that fundamentally disallowing Melee sports events online would at least cost the company in reputation. The social media campaign brought attention to Nintendo’s draconian response, which quickly became unpopular and criticized across gaming circles. The Melee community fired back with the #FreeMelee hashtag, which reached trending. Nintendo’s reasoning now gave them carte blanche to cancel any Melee tournament, presenting a raw existential threat Melee had to fight to avoid either a massive contraction or the outright death of the esport. What Nintendo may not have realized is, this was much, much worse for Melee. The anti-piracy statement, in Nintendo’s eyes, might have seemed safer. Especially since the mod in question was doing a better job of creating online matchmaking for Smash than the billion dollar company had managed thus far. Nintendo’s framing possibly came from thinking an anti-piracy statement would look better than an anti-modding statement. Nintendo framed their cease and desist as a fight against piracy, even though Nintendo no longer sells copies of Melee and the ISO files could be obtained from legal copies. It came due to online Melee running on the PC, thus requiring ISO files which sometimes come from pirated copies of Melee. Then, Nintendo released a statement that claimed the cease and desist didn’t come due to Slippi. Slippi gave Melee a second wind in the online era, so the Melee community was quick to defend it. Slippi is a mod that vastly improves Melee’s ability to be played online, elevating the game to one of the most competitively viable online fighting games. Simply follow those instructions, except when it tells you to use the Melee/20XX ISO, use the SD Remix ISO instead.Harn claimed they received the cease and desist for using Slippi. There is a great guide on Reddit that will walk you through playing Melee on WiiU. Step 2: Follow the instructions on Reddit, except using SD Remix instead of Melee/20XX ![]() You can make your SD Remix ISO by following our ISO Instructions. Installation Overview Step 1: Build the SD Remix ISO Con: Requires a copy of an exploitable game (we use Super Smash Brothers Brawl for SmashStack).Con: Introduces emulation lag, and therefore is not viable for competitive play or practicing for competitive play.Pro: Can play with different settings and options, like widescreen (more than the GameCube, equal to the Wii, less that Dolphin).Pro: Many different controller options, including GameCube controller, using the WiiU GameCube adapter, in comparison to Wii and GameCube methods.Pro: WiiU is a newer Nintendo console in comparison to the Wii and GameCube.
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