- cross-posted to:
- gaming@lemmy.zip
- technology@lemmit.online
- cross-posted to:
- gaming@lemmy.zip
- technology@lemmit.online
Didn’t Nintendo do this when they started selling “their” ROM’s in their virtual console? I remember some hubba about the .nes format?
Yeah. I think they also used an emulator. I don’t remember which game/system it was though.
It’s like Disney releasing a Micky Mouse movie, buts it’s actually Felix the Cat.
It’s like Disney releasing a Micky Mouse movie, buts it’s actually Felix the Cat.
It’s more like Disney releasing Mickey Mouse into the public domain.
More like Disney releasing Mickey Mouse fan art without crediting the artist.
It was that they were using roms ripped straight from the internet, they left the headers in place.
Hubba hubba
Hubba bubba
That a Marsupilami voice !!!
Any software engineers who work for big companies have any insight on this? Don’t these places keep their own source? Or is it just on somebody’s laptop that no one’s seen since 2015?
Don’t these places keep their own source?
There’ve been some cases of remastering projects being affected by the loss of some of the source material, such as the Silent Hill HD Project
Which is why I find the negative attitude of so many of these companies toward emulation and fan conservation of abandonware so frustrating, there’s a proven track record that they cannot be trusted with the task.
Microsoft used pirated software to create some windows sounds back in the day
https://www.techrepublic.com/forums/discussions/windows-uses-pirated-software/
people only care when they’re told to and are being paid to. If nobody told anyone to care about the archival of source code (and build environments) of old projects, then guess what, it’s not likely that anyone is going to do it. Add some good old revolving doors and presto: shit’s fucked
Even if the source is kept decently preserved, the build environments are usually not. If they still have a machine in the exact state it was in at the time the game was finished, it might be as easy as Project -> Build, but… they almost certainly don’t. So that likely has to be rebuilt from scratch, and you’d be very lucky to find any kind of documentation on how things worked.
Game studios tend to have it particularly bad because of how much binary-only engines/middleware (standalone bits like Havok physics/Bink video/etc) they used, how often the game’s data and code builds were mixed together in some way and how in some cases the project is designed to build things like console releases at the same time. If you lost the install files for your physics engine, you’re probably straight up screwed.
By the time you’ve figured all of that out, you can be easily hundreds of hours in, with tons of weird little issues that might require different people to solve. Some examples: you might end up needing to build it in Windows XP because no other OS runs all of the software used during the build, any sysadmin is NOT going to be happy installing WinXP on their network so the machine has to stay offline, getting code onto that machine might be a pain due to how Perforce or whatever is used by them, even things taken for granted like a particular version of the DirectX 9 SDK might be hard to find, etc. Sometimes licensing/activation of tools used in the build process is an impossible to solve problem because it needs some DRM dongle or activation server that no longer exists and the software was never publicly available, so there is no crack.
I would imagine more bureaucratic processes being the issue here. I can imagine some Rockstar employee tasked with getting the game up on Steam, trying to get the game through official channels to put on Steam, getting frustrated, saying f-it and downloading the Razor 1911 version thinking they removed all the references and then pushing it to Steam.
“oops. I forgot to remove the giant lit up billboard”.
You’re probably right. I think it’s funny that these giant studios all have the wall with a physical copy of each release behind glass, but they can never seen to find them when they need it.
Don’t these places keep their own source?
It’s easy to lose track of important files when years go by with lots of employee turnover and migrating data across servers or to the cloud.
I’m a sysadmin and more than once I’ve had to shut down a file server just to find out what is still important when someone comes looking for it.
So I was listening to the WAN show, and Luke said that the DRM was stacked with booby traps that broke the game mechanically in a bunch of ways if the DRM was bypassed without also removing them. The crack did; their version didn’t.
That doesn’t make ANY sense.
They locked their keys inside their program and had to break in.
Here’s a video from Modern Vintage Gamer explaining why they did that https://youtu.be/XEKPUARYckc?si=oxszKFtYHBL9TmHH
Thank you for posting this, it is a fascinating story.
thanka for the link. that was worth the watch
After watching the video the main thought I have in my mind is that the whole issue could have been subverted by building two sets of executables. One with DRM and one without. The DRM free version could then be stored for potential future use. That way you wouldn’t have to necessarily maintain the build environment.
Obviously this wouldn’t have occurred to me if I was building the game, but I hope the companies learned as soon as they ran across the issue the first time.
I sure hope none of those cracks were licensed in a way that would cause trouble for unauthorized commercial use 🤷