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Zeus
08-17-2007, 08:50 PM
PRESS RELEASE: Mexican Raids Net 15,000 Counterfeit Nintendo Products

Mexican authorities conducted raids today against 12 alleged distributors of counterfeit Nintendo® products in a major “fayuca” (contraband) market in Guadalajara. Authorities seized 15,000 counterfeit Nintendo products, including 4,500 counterfeit Wii™ game discs.

The Guadalajara raids follow other Nintendo actions in Mexico during the past few months. Last month, Nintendo worked with customs agents to stop a shipment of more than 5,500 counterfeit Nintendo products entering Manzanillo, exported from China. Prior to that, Nintendo assisted local authorities in a raid of the San Juan de Dios market in Guadalajara, where 23 stores were shut down and more than 56,000 counterfeit Nintendo products were confiscated, including 11,000 counterfeit Wii discs.

“Mexico is Nintendo’s largest market in Latin America, where the problem of video game piracy is widespread,” said Jodi Daugherty, Nintendo of America’s senior director of anti-piracy. “Since January, Nintendo has worked with law enforcement agencies worldwide to seize 100,000 counterfeit Wii games.”

Earlier this month, U.S. Immigrations and Customs Enforcement agents executed 32 federal search warrants in 16 states as part of an investigation into the alleged sale and distribution of illegal Wii modification chips designed to circumvent the security embedded in the hardware and allow users to play counterfeit Wii software.

Nintendo and its developers and publishers lost an estimated $762 million in sales in 2006 due to piracy of its products. For more information about Nintendo’s aggressive fight against piracy, please contact:

xcxv2
08-17-2007, 09:28 PM
great picture for the article

Psphreak
08-17-2007, 09:30 PM
Those fayucas are awesome little places. That's where you can get those 100 nes games in one cartridge at around 7 bucks US. I get a kick out of them carts.

jukka
08-17-2007, 10:05 PM
LOL !! fayuca, i'd never imagine reading that in a non-mexican forum.
I'm mexican and those "fayucas" are in almotst every state, at the eyes of every one, they're not hidden at all, they sell piracy as if it was food.
They even know when authorities are coming so they just don't show up that day, next day they continue "working" as if nothing had happend.
:mad: Damn fayuqueros

Ichinisan
08-17-2007, 10:12 PM
I'm sure that the majority of this was TV games using "NES on a Chip" and pirated NES games... like the "XGAME 360" reported recently.

o 345 o
08-18-2007, 01:41 AM
Nop, actually down here in mexico the "fayuqueros" play with psp's (with isos :mad:) and Xbox 360 (with "copias piratas"). And yep, they're not hidden, actually there are "Fayuca malls" when you can go and buy some "backups" :rolleyes:.

I hope this situation change 'cause it's really annoying (miispelled word) to see all the people with their modded consoles and selling them in front of the police..!! (and sometimes they buy them :P)

Thanx for the info

Putos Fayuqueros :D

Cheers

sk8er_4_life_ez
08-18-2007, 03:07 AM
NOOOOOO!!!!!! NOT MEXICO!!!! ::flees the country:: lmfao i guess... hmm... i wonder who would those people be..... sucks to be them... no one will ever stop the masterminds m\behind the hole thing tho ha ha ha ha!!!!

Xenogears V
08-18-2007, 09:21 AM
Are you have been counted in the total sales?.:rolleyes: lol.

zosh
08-18-2007, 10:05 AM
I'm sure that the majority of this was TV games using "NES on a Chip" and pirated NES games... like the "XGAME 360" reported recently.
Nah, those are sold outside the markets on the street, you wouldn't need to raid any place to get a hand on those. (I was particularly amused by the "FunStation Advance", in a small case looking like a PSOne with a cartridge slot in the middle, playing NES games.)

I've been to Guadalajara in May, and several times at the "San Juan de Dios". That's why this news makes me chuckle. They certainly don't sell "counterfeit" Wii games there. Unless you would regard an unlabeled dvd-r with a photocopy of a case cover in a plastic bag as "conterfeit", of course.

And from what I've seen, 11.000 Wii disks is about the volume one of those little sales boxes will handle in a few days' time. This is by no means a "major bust", more like a duty call, in a market at the size of an entire city block (http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&hl=en&geocode=&q=guadalajara,+mexico&ie=UTF8&ll=20.675627,-103.34017&spn=0.003664,0.004817&t=k&z=18&om=1) where two of three floors are crammed with imitated products.