Forgot password
Enter the email address you used when you joined and we'll send you instructions to reset your password.
If you used Apple or Google to create your account, this process will create a password for your existing account.
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Reset password instructions sent. If you have an account with us, you will receive an email within a few minutes.
Something went wrong. Try again or contact support if the problem persists.

8-Year-Old Receives Pornographic Nintendo 3DS for Christmas

When a brand new 3DS given to an eight-year-old isn't as brand new as it seems, one angry father is out to determine who would do such a dastardly deed.
This article is over 10 years old and may contain outdated information

Going through someone else’s extremely personal effects is always a little awkward, whether it’s steamy love letters or the suspiciously stuck-together pages of a Sears catalog. 

Recommended Videos

And that’s when you’re already an adult. Now imagine you’re eight years old.

Tom Mayhew from Hampton, Virginia, bought his eight-year-old son a brand new Nintendo 3DS for Christmas from the local Walmart. During the holiday, the Mayhews had extended family over, many of which were children. When Tom’s son and the other children began testing out the 3DS’s camera feature, they found out that the handheld was in fact not new, and contained a dozen or so pornographic images already saved to the SD card.

Apparently the images so disturbed the young child, that he simply refuses to play with it. On the WAVY News 10 TV clip

Normally he would be asking to play on his DS and he hasn’t yet.”

Originally Tom Mayhew thought that it might have been Nintendo’s mistake, but now he’s leaning towards a (much more realistic) theory:

“It was possibly a bought item at one time and returned. … Those things were not deleted from it, so it wasn’t a new product. It was a used product.”


Mayhew then proceeded to do some investigative digging. He found that the pictures were time-stamped in early December. He’d bought the handheld under the assumption that it was new at the Hampton Walmart on Cunningham Drive on December 23. 

And now he wants to know who it was that put those pictures on that 3DS. 

“There is no reason for them to be even really on there. … It’s disgusting for one. It seems that this was the only thing left on it.”

The news station took it upon themselves to call Walmart’s corporate office, but so far have not received any reply. 

In all honesty, the entire situation sounds like a bad joke from the previous owner, who was obviously tech-savvy enough to delete the rest of his or her information off the device. The fine art of trolling; ever a nuisance (and occasionally damaging) to the rest of the world.

This is more indicative of the fact that while open-box items should be marked (and marked down!) when restocked, retailers receive so many products back that unless they’re obviously defective, it’s likely that most of them simply go right back onto the shelves as new. It’s certainly one of the reasons why it’s a good idea to do a deep scan when you first pick up a new hard drive.

After all, this sort of thing has happened before, and it’s almost certain to happen again. You never know whether or not what you buy has been used before, and whether or not what you find will be incriminating.

Hopefully this is a lesson the Mayhews never forget.


GameSkinny is supported by our audience. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn a small affiliate commission. Learn more about our Affiliate Policy
Author
Image of Stephanie Tang
Stephanie Tang
Avid PC gamer, long-time console lover. I enjoy shooting things in the face and am dangerously addicted to pretty. I'm also a cat.