I was tired and sleepy and realized I typed my post in a rushed, provocative and possibly unclear manner. A while ago I started typing an long and detailed post justifying it, but I'm starting to realize I don't want to get into prolonged arguments in this forum and I'd rather just get along. So I apologize for not elaborating certain things according to the way I wrote them previously.
I'll just get straight to my vision instead, I hope we can agree to disagree:
I don't think that celebrating piracy alone directly translates to being an evil prick punishing the developers, nor making matters worse in general. There are cases which are more subject to this line of questioning, such as streaming an leaked game, but it's not every case.
I understand that some will associate these "piracy celebration" posts with the worst case scenario. But I want people to understand that paying for original games is highly inaccessible in countries such as mine, and Nintendo does absolutely nothing to relieve that, in a time where Steam proved that's totally doable. Add that with all the other reasons to dislike Nintendo and you'll see why people celebrate piracy.
To properly finish expressing my thoughts, I'll address this quote from DeadSkullzjr:
If you don't want me to interact with Nintendo in any way, they shouldn't have went great lengths to make me love their IPs then proceed to enforce the ownership of such IPs in the most toxic and destructive ways possible.
Sometimes I really wish Nintendo was gone so we get to make all sorts of awesome fangames in peace (no, I'm not advocating for people to be jobless), but we all know Nintendo isn't gonna stop closing them regardless of piracy or not.
I think the way companies are abusive with their intellectual properties is a genuine oppression to works of art in general. "But it's the law" or "it's always been this way" does not make it right.
If you don't want me to interact with Nintendo in any way, they shouldn't have went great lengths to make me love their IPs then proceed to enforce the ownership of such IPs in the most toxic and destructive ways possible.
I used to like Microsoft for their consoles and games for said consoles years ago, I liked them all the way up to the Xbox 360 days, but things happened, out came the Xbox One, and I put my foot down and said "nope" with the whole online only bullshit, I still haven't gotten a system or played anything past the Xbox 360, and I still to this day love some of the franchises that came out and or continued to persist with the 360, and I know, many of them kept continuing onwards with the Xbox One, and now the Xbox Series X|S (like the Halo series for example). You can still love something, like certain IPs, and still put your foot down when you need to. I really can't find any sensible reasoning with what you said.
Whether any of us like it or not, Nintendo is technically entitled to treat their IP however the hell they want, I don't have to agree with it, others don't have to agree with it, but I'm not going to sit and tell myself that two wrongs make a right, go out of my way to be a hateful son of a bitch about it, rigorously convince myself that what I'm doing isn't wrong at all, and then push a cancerous mindset out to people in mass to try and double down on my own insanities. The fact of reality is, the law is flawed where copyright and IP is concerned, Nintendo, or any company for that matter, can and or will go after stuff, whether we agree with it, like it, understand it, or not. Unless you go out of your way to fix that broken aspect of the law(s), and or take the mantle in the company by busting your ass all the way to the top, and proceed to make the changes that you see fit, this illogical approach that most people have will not do shit, except draw even more attention to the situation in ways you clearly don't like. The method of choice most people have clearly isn't working, based on the logic of many, nothing is changing, which mean's the approach presented with the piracy and such, isn't doing anything worthwhile. Either go back to the drawing board and find a different approach, or go with the option that works, drop your support entirely, stop encouraging the company you hate so much (this includes "trying" their games), walk away, and find another company worth supporting. You can't set a boundary intended to stick, yet have the audacity to move the boundary line repeatedly for your own benefits, you need to draw it once, and stick to it, otherwise you merely take a hypocritical stance that can't be sympathized with.