(via Nintnedo Everything)
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What I gleaned from this is that Nintendo is merely addressing a true-to-heart bug. What Nintendo said is that, when transferring a Mii, a glitch would assign a random relationship, regardless of gender or marital status. While the topic of this game enforcing gender conformity is up in the air (and, frankly, irrelevant for this topic), this isn't Nintendo being scary in their withdrawal from same-sex relationship support. It was a bug that merely resulted in same-sex relationships (in which one could produce offspring).
For more clarification, click the link in the 1st line of the article.
Last year, Nintendo released a patch for Tomodachi Life in Japan to address a bug that allowed for same-sex relationships. This same issue has also been tackled for the game’s upcoming western release.
Some may be curious as to why Nintendo fixed the bug in the first place, and why same-sex relationships aren’t possible. For those interested, check out Nintendo UK’s lengthy statement about the situation after the break.
Two developments occurred that led to some misunderstanding about this. First, as a result of a mistake in comprehension of Japanese, some people misinterpreted Japanese reports and fan activity and thought same-sex relationships were possible.This occurred because they saw Japanese fans posting game screenshots of male and female Mii characters, where female Mii characters were designed and clothed in such a way that they looked male. Since these explanations were made in Japanese by the Japanese fans who posted the images, the Japanese people do not have such a misunderstanding.
Second, a critical bug occurred in the original Japanese version of the game which made it impossible for the player to continue the game. When Mii characters were imported from a Wii console, or the previous game in the Tomodachi Collection series on Nintendo DS (which was only released in Japan), into the Nintendo 3DS version, it could lead to scrambled Mii data within the Nintendo 3DS version. This could result in different Miis being randomly assigned to existing in-game relationships, such as already married Mii, or as just one other example, giving the appearance of same-sex relations. Because this bug caused the inability for the player to save the game data and continue the game, we released a patch.
Second, a critical bug occurred in the original Japanese version of the game which made it impossible for the player to continue the game. When Mii characters were imported from a Wii console, or the previous game in the Tomodachi Collection series on Nintendo DS (which was only released in Japan), into the Nintendo 3DS version, it could lead to scrambled Mii data within the Nintendo 3DS version. This could result in different Miis being randomly assigned to existing in-game relationships, such as already married Mii, or as just one other example, giving the appearance of same-sex relations. Because this bug caused the inability for the player to save the game data and continue the game, we released a patch.
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What I gleaned from this is that Nintendo is merely addressing a true-to-heart bug. What Nintendo said is that, when transferring a Mii, a glitch would assign a random relationship, regardless of gender or marital status. While the topic of this game enforcing gender conformity is up in the air (and, frankly, irrelevant for this topic), this isn't Nintendo being scary in their withdrawal from same-sex relationship support. It was a bug that merely resulted in same-sex relationships (in which one could produce offspring).
For more clarification, click the link in the 1st line of the article.