In response to Hiro the Dragon King
Hiro the Dragon King wrote:
The Wii is simple to mod, or was; Nintendo seems to have taken it upon themselves recently, to delete the mods from peoples Wiis upon updating, as well as patching it. The 360 requires physical modding which can get you banned from X-Box live if you simply forget to unplug your ethernet cable, and as you have said, the PS3 doesn't currently have a way.

The Wii is still just as easy to mod and lots of people have a second 360 just so they don't have to worry about getting banned. While other 360 owners just risk it or don't care about live at all.

Sardonic much?

Yes.

Buying games from on-line retailers is not something I have had particularly good experiences with, not to mention that most of the games I search for are listed between $40 and $130.

I know things are crazy expensive, I was just saying that if piracy is so wrong he shouldn't half-arse his efforts to make sure he doesn't have to "steal" the game.
In response to Hiro the Dragon King
The Wii is simple to mod, or was; Nintendo seems to have taken it upon themselves recently, to delete the mods from peoples Wiis upon updating, as well as patching it.

You forgot to note that Nintendo's update carries with it a significant risk of bricking several million Wiis (All the early ones that still have boot2v3)

There are still a bunch of holes in the Wii System Menu and games that are exploited to run games - some of the upcoming ones (Smash Stack in particular) are going to be almost impossible to patch.

Wii is basically cracked open so hard that Nintendo will never be able to patch it closed again. The horses have bolted.
In response to Jp
That isn't true, that is like trying to say it is "hacker" proof. For as many hacks as they come out with, Nintendo will have some sort of fix for it. I personally just don't update my Wii.
In response to Ham Doctor
There's millions of Wiis that can not be patched. There will always be an exploit somewhere to take advantage of that.

And for the rest? Someone will get around everything Nintendo can throw at them.
In response to Ham Doctor
Smash Stack smashes the stack when Brawl reads data off of the SD card - it doesn't go through the savefile system first.

So in order to patch it, Nintendo would have to go looking through the SD card and stop you loading level files that are corrupted into Brawl, much like they stop the Twilight Princess hack by looking for it and deleting it on startup.

But, there's a catch: There's no code in Brawl to do that sort of look-for-and-delete thing, and the System Menu can't get at it once the game's booted up. So:

1 - Boot Brawl
2 - Insert card
3 - Load level
4 - ???
5 - Profit!

And patching the system firmware can't do a damned thing to stop it. What they can do is start selling patched versions of Brawl minus the exploit, but they can't patch the millions of exploitable Brawls already out.
In response to Jp
I am willing to bet there is more then one way to fix it. Always will be.
In response to Hiro the Dragon King
Since when in the holy hell was the 360 emulatable? Out of the PS3 and 360, it has higher chances of becoming emulatable, but this fast?
In response to Jp
Ever hear of a pawn shop? Or used products? Promoting piracy is just absurd, even more so when you provide ridiculous reasons for doing so.
In response to Smoko
Smoko wrote:
...lots of people have a second 360 just so they don't have to worry about getting banned. While other 360 owners just risk it or don't care about live at all.

Again, beyond just "trying out" games.
In response to Hiro the Dragon King
Pirating is idiotic to begin with, if you like a game, or are looking forward to it, then I think it won't kill you to buy it.

Can't buy it? Wait until you can. Pirates make me sick with how they think it's perfectly okay to steal from these companies.
In response to Vic Rattlehead
Vic Rattlehead wrote:
Since when in the holy hell was the 360 emulatable? Out of the PS3 and 360, it has higher chances of becoming emulatable, but this fast?

I'm sorry, I meant to write "extremely impossible" rather than "extremely difficult"... My bad, Holmes.
In response to Hiro the Dragon King
I didn't mean anything rude with that, incase you thought I did. I was just rather surprised to see it was possible, even if barely functional.
In response to Vic Rattlehead
Vic Rattlehead wrote:
I didn't mean anything rude with that, incase you thought I did. I was just rather surprised to see it was possible, even if barely functional.

Nah. A functioning 360 emulator is still years away.
In response to Hiro the Dragon King
I don't support emulators at all - but it's always interesting to know that these consoles are now far more powerful than any computer.
In response to Vic Rattlehead
Vic Rattlehead wrote:
I don't support emulators at all - but it's always interesting to know that these consoles are now far more powerful than any computer.

What's wrong with emulators? Emulators are not only perfectly legal in most cases, but incredibly more powerful in terms of functionality than the systems themselves, in most cases.
In response to Hiro the Dragon King
System emulators legality is a gray area, IMO. On it's own it's legal, but if it's used to play any ROMs (which aren't)... then it's technically illegal, no?
In response to Vic Rattlehead
Vic Rattlehead wrote:
Pirating is idiotic to begin with, if you like a game, or are looking forward to it, then I think it won't kill you to buy it.

If I like a game or if I am looking forward to a game, there is no reason for me to try it out, I already know that it's worth buying.

God forbid if someone were to play ten minutes of a game to see if they will like it.

Pirates make me sick with how they think it's perfectly okay to steal from these companies.

I'm not sure how many times this is going to be explained in these forums or for that matter, in this thread, but piracy isn't stealing.


As a side note, the largest factor of piracy is it's ease of use.

Even if I were to buy a CD, I may still download it as well, just so I don't have to go through the process of ripping and archiving it. I don't have to bother with any DRM that may or may not be present if I used the CD or the 'legal download' sources.

As far as games go, at least with the older ones, piracy saves you the hassle of tracking down a physical copy, having to deal with 'damaged copies', ridiculous resale prices, or any other problem that may arise. ROMs also allow for a rather organized and easily searchable library.

Not that I support morally unsound piracy though...
In response to Hiro the Dragon King
Pirating older games is illegal yes... but I honestly don't think people care as much.
And modern games (PS3/360) have demos for most games coming out. Pirating to "play as a demo" is no worse than pirating to play in general, you can't justify piracy.

And really now, DRM? That's the bulk of your complaints, a hack guard?
In response to Hiro the Dragon King
I'm not sure how many times this is going to be explained in these forums or for that matter, in this thread, but piracy isn't stealing.

Argue semantics all you want but it doesn't make it right legally or ethically.

Not that I support morally unsound piracy though...

Sounds like you do anyway. If it's not as easy or cheap as you'd like you just ste... ok ok violate a companies intellectual property and engage in unlawful duplication of digital data you have zero right to in any sense.
In response to Vic Rattlehead
Vic Rattlehead wrote:
System emulators legality is a gray area, IMO. On it's own it's legal, but if it's used to play any ROMs (which aren't)... then it's technically illegal, no?

No. Emulators are mostly perfectly legal. An emulator generally falls under reverse-engineering, which is perfectly legal unless created under illegal circumstances.

If I were to use stolen software with my IBM-compatible PC, that doesn't make the PC illegal.
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