There was something unusual about this week’s Nintendo Direct — a showcase of the Japanese company’s upcoming games — and it wasn’t that they finally announced a
Legend of Zelda game where you actually play as Zelda.
What was strange was that the contents didn’t leak in advance.
Up until this week, a social-media account named
Pyoro had spent the last year popping up ahead of Nintendo’s marketing events to tell fans what was coming. Sometimes the account would post
obscure teases. Other times they would specify that the company was about to announce a new remake or
Donkey Kong game. Ahead of each Nintendo Direct, Pyoro would share just about everything that was going to be revealed.
In the buttoned-up, video-game industry, where companies stick to strict marketing plans, leakers develop their own cults of personality by penetrating the opacity. Nobody knew Pyoro’s identity or how they got information, but as the account continued to predict new announcements with a perfect track record, they attracted a huge audience. The account gained more than 100,000 followers on X and inspired a series of threads on the large, gaming forum ResetEra. (“
Pyoro Leaks Switch Game Announcements. Part 4”)
But Pyoro was uncharacteristically quiet ahead of this week’s Nintendo Direct, saying that they
didn’t expect many big announcements. They were subsequently proven wrong when the company showed off new
Mario,
Zelda and
Metroid games. People wondered: how could an account with a perfect batting average suddenly get things so wrong?
Then came a twist. Several observers — led by a ResetEra poster called dgamemaster —
began to realize that in contrast to previous announcements, these new surprises did not have pre-seeded webpages on Nintendo’s store. They followed the bread crumbs and realized that Pyoro’s previous leaks had all involved games that were set to go live on Nintendo’s website as soon as they were announced. Games that were only put up on the store after the Nintendo Direct
were not leaked by Pyoro in advance.
It appeared that Pyoro had access to Nintendo’s web backend, and the account’s information was limited to what was available there.
I reached out to Pyoro to try to get clarity on this. Over direct messages, they told me that their source works for Nintendo of Japan, “but I’m unsure how they obtain their information” and that the “backend theory is a reasonable guess.”
Pyoro is just the latest mysterious rumormonger to get knocked off a pedestal in recent weeks. Another X user, who went by the handle Midori, had claimed to be a Japanese woman with inside access to companies such as Square Enix Holdings Co. and Sega. Last week, the accountholder confessed that he was neither Japanese, nor a woman, and was actually a different rumormonger
with a shadier reputation.
Accounts such as Midori often build up a reputation by getting one or two things right, then either sticking to vague or unprovable predictions or going off the rails entirely. One ostensible leaker, who went by the handle Silknigth, cultivated a following after predicting when the PlayStation game
Ghost of Tsushima would arrive on PC. They subsequently made a bunch of claims about companies such as Sony Group Corp., but none were true, as I pointed out later in a post
debunking their rumors. Shortly after my post, Silknigth deleted their account.
I’ve long been fascinated by anonymous video-game rumormongers, and I’ve had interactions with some wild ones. In 2014, one account that garnered a fair amount of attention
told me that they were a prophet. “When my intuition kicks in I see flashes of what will happen, like pictures,” they said.
In 2022, a popular account called “The Real Insider” turned out to be a YouTuber who was briefed by companies such as Ubisoft Entertainment SA in advance and then simply used this alternate account to
break his embargoes.
But recently, thanks to backend leaks on Nintendo’s eShop and even
YouTube, the rumormongering culture has been particularly wild — and leakers are dropping like flies.
Of course, there will always be new ones to take their place.
Shortly after the Nintendo Direct finished and Pyoro was called out, posters on ResetEra noticed something strange. The night before, an
account named AdaWong wrote: “I’m betting on a top down LoZ game starring Zelda and a new Mario and Luigi title... their Brothership is too iconic y’know” — a message that seemed prescient after the announcements of
The Legend of Zelda: Echoes of Wisdom, starring Zelda, and
Mario & Luigi: Brothership.