A GROUP of Japanese streamers have been banned from Splatoon 3 and YouTube after adding adult video content into the game on stream.

Sinsogumi is a group of virtual YouTubers, or V-Tubers, who use an online avatar instead of showing their faces.

A chroma key can change one colour to show any image or video you want.

1

A chroma key can change one colour to show any image or video you want.Credit: Nintendo

On October 8, they shared a stream playing popular Nintendo shooter Splatoon 3 with an extra incentive to not lose the match.

In Splatoon 3, two teams battle it out to cover the game’s map in the colour ink that represents their team.

The more ink your team has on the field, the less the opposing team can have, so it is a constant war to cover the field in your colour.

There is a tool called a chroma key that many streamers use to change the appearance of one colour on their videos.

Splatoon 3 will collaborate with Pokémon for the upcoming Splatfest
Weapons, stages, and splatfest: Everything coming to Splatoon 3

Usually, a chroma key is used for green screens to virtually show people in different locations.

In this case a chroma key was set up to change the colour of the other team’s ink, and make it display adult videos.

If the streamers team was winning it was not a problem, as their stream saw the usual brightly coloured ink that Splatoon is known for.

However, when their team was losing, explicit sexual videos could be clearly seen on stream, which is against YouTube’s terms of service.

Most read in Gaming

It also goes against Nintendo’s terms of service for those streaming its games.

One member of the group, Ikinone, made an apology though it’s since been deleted, as have the group’s channels.

People also claimed that Ikinone and the group Sinsogumi’s apologies were not sincere.

Nintendo’s official Japanese Twitter account reminded its followers of its terms of service for streaming its games.

Martin Lewis shows how anyone on Universal Credit can cut essential bill by £230
LadBaby shares £23 hack to stay warm during the energy crisis

This includes Nintendo reserving the right to claim copyright on videos that violate public order and morals or significantly damage the value of the characters or the world.

As Nintendo likes to maintain a family-friendly image of the company and its games, it’s easy to see why it would not want this content online.

Written by Georgina Young on behalf of GLHF.

All the latest Gaming tips and tricks

Looking for tips and tricks across your favourite consoles and games? We have you covered…

This post first appeared on Thesun.co.uk

You May Also Like

Save £150 on Dell Inspiron 24 PC with discount code this February

If you’re on the hunt for a top-quality desktop PC then Dell…

Facebook turns 20! Nostalgic images reveal what Mark Zuckerberg’s original website looked like when it launched in 2004 – and how much it has changed since

Are you ready for some news that will make you feel old? Today…

Roblox users blaming Chipotle for major server outage after game goes down

IRATE Roblox gamers blame Chipotle’s virtual Halloween-themed burrito promotion as the root…

Delete Facebook Messenger NOW over privacy warning, expert warns

A TECH expert is warning that if you’re one of the 1.3…