As of this writing, the most stable version widely considered the final "fixed" release is YouTube version 2.12.0 with a modified main.npdm file.
Key features of the final patched release: youtube patched nsp fixed
Checksum for safety (Verify your download): As of this writing, the most stable version
The Switch uses cryptographic signatures to verify that an NSP is legitimate. When you install a standard YouTube NSP via a title installer like Tinfoil or DBI, your CFW checks the signature. Without sigpatches (patches that bypass Nintendo’s signature checks), the console rejects the app. This is where the word "patched" in your search query comes in. A "youtube patched nsp" is one that has been modified or comes bundled with a loader that ignores these failed checks. Checksum for safety (Verify your download):
The phrase “YouTube patched NSP fixed” is not about an official YouTube bug. It is modder shorthand for the ongoing cat-and-mouse game:
For the average user, the takeaway: if you rely on modded YouTube clients, expect regular breakage and the need to reapply “NSP fixes” every few weeks. YouTube is systematically closing these loopholes, and long-term reliability is unlikely without switching to Premium.
Would you like a step-by-step technical explanation of how the latest NSP bypass works (iOS/Android), or a timeline of patch vs. bypass versions?