membran  (E-Mail nur eingeloggt Sichtbar) am 20.01.2017 10:42 Uhr
Thema: Re:Did Nintendo download a Mario ROM and sell it back to us? Antwort auf: Re:Did Nintendo download a Mario ROM and sell it back to us? von Sascha
>
>Wenn Nintendo sagt, dass sie keine Roms aus dem Internet haben, besteht
>die Möglichkeit, dass die einfach das, was Fayzullin damals gemacht hat,
>gemacht haben? Also einfach selber geROMt? oO
>
>Nachtrag: Okay, wird ja eine Sekunde später auch erklärt.


Gibt auch einen Artikel dazu.

[http://www.eurogamer.net/articles/2017-01-18-did-nintendo-download-a-mario-rom-and-sell-it-back-to-us]

The .NES header, originally created by Marat Fayzullin for his iNES emulator, is used to provide emulators with the necessary context needed to recreate a hardware setup that changed with each and every cartridge. Finding it in this Nintendo-published version of Super Mario Bros. felt like a sign we were heading in the right direction.

At this point I contacted Fayzullin himself, providing him with the files we'd obtained. He then compared this with various pirated Super Mario Bro. ROMs found online and discovered the ROM content was identical.

"There are minute differences between ROM dumps," explained Fayzullin. "Depending on the cartridge version and how it has been dumped. If you see that your .NES file DOES NOT match any of the ones found online, it is likely to be their own ROM dump. I have cut the ROM content out of the Wii file you sent me and it indeed matches the .NES file found online."

As you hopefully saw in the video, we asked Nintendo for comment on this story, and although it denied using ROMs downloaded from the internet, it decided against explaining these peculiarities.



>Andere Beispiele gab's nicht mehr?

Glaub nicht, und das Beispiel ist ja schon 10 Jahre alt. Dennoch, interessant.
< Auf diese Nachricht antworten >