A man has been arrested on charges of forcible obstruction of business after sending a bomb threat to Nintendo's headquarters.
| 📒 | - Aichi Prefecture Man Arrested for Sending Bomb Threat to Nintendo HQ; Admits to Charges - Nintendo has faced three such obstruction-of-business cases since 2022, leading to tangible damages including event cancellations - South Korea is no exception, as global industry trends increase risks for major corporations |

The Minami Police Station of the Kyoto Prefectural Police announced on the 12th that it had arrested a 27-year-old unemployed man from Hekinan, Aichi Prefecture, on charges of forcible obstruction of business. The suspect is accused of mailing a threatening letter to Nintendo's headquarters in Kyoto in March, claiming he would bomb the building. The letter arrived on the 16th of that month; police searched the area following a report from the company, but no suspicious objects were found.
The suspect has admitted to the charges, and his motive remains under investigation. This is not the first time Nintendo has been targeted. In 2023, a female office worker from Tokyo was arrested for mailing a death certificate—which included a date of death and a description of fatal injuries—along with a threatening letter to a Nintendo executive in 2022.
The most severe incident in terms of scale involved a series of threats spanning approximately three months, from August to November 2023. The perpetrator, a man named Kenshin Kazama, was a local government official at Hitachi City Hall who sent a total of 39 threatening messages through the inquiry form on Nintendo's official website. His messages included threats of murder against participants of the Splatoon Koshien tournament and warnings of bomb attacks, with one note stating, 'I will make you regret releasing such a game into the world.' In response, Nintendo postponed the 'Splatoon Koshien 2023 National Finals,' which had been scheduled for December 2023, and canceled 'Nintendo Live 2024 Tokyo,' slated for January 2024. The Kyoto District Court sentenced him to one year in prison, suspended for four years, citing the persistent and malicious nature of the crimes.
All three incidents share the commonality of being perpetrated by outsiders with no direct connection to Nintendo. Furthermore, the motives for these acts remain unclear. The woman who threatened company executives in 2022 stated that she held 'no direct grudge' against the company, and Kazama similarly testified that he sent the threats to relieve stress accumulated from losing in the game.
It is also noteworthy that all three cases occurred at a time of heightened vigilance against indiscriminate threats toward corporations, following the 2019 Kyoto Animation arson attack. In fact, during the trial for a previous threat case, a deposition from a Nintendo employee was read aloud, stating that the Kyoto Animation arson and murder case 'flashed through my mind and terrified me.' Despite the fear these threats instill regarding actual physical harm, such incidents continue to recur. Experts point out that threats targeting game companies are on the rise globally, and that high-profile companies like Nintendo are inevitably more exposed to such risks.
Similar threats have also occurred in South Korea. In 2023, visitors were evacuated during HoYoverse's Genshin Impact Summer Festival due to a bomb threat. Other game companies, including Com2uS, NCSoft, and Nimble Neuron, have also been targets of online terror threats, and similar incidents have repeatedly disrupted offline events such as the Dungeon & Fighter Festival. In response, the government has strengthened penalties for acts that incite public fear, such as posting murder threats against the general public, through amendments to the law on public intimidation.
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