Results -9 to 0 of 25

Threaded View

  1. #17
    Player bungiefan's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2011
    Location
    Ragnarok
    Posts
    188
    Quote Originally Posted by CrystalWeapon View Post
    The game would save gigs in memory...
    That's how it works for the DirectX data for the PC DATs. The PS2 DATs were only released in PC-accessible format about a year ago, and are different in data structure. Nobody has analyzed them and posted results in English that I can find, other than to say they don't follow the PC data structure.

    Many ROM folders have fewer DATs in them on PS2, and some of the folders have more. The game is only about half the size on PS2 compared to PC.

    Now that they are running into limitations of the console in so many places, many of the original PS2 version programmers are not around that wrote the code and understand it. Rewriting the game with fixes to the limitations would be similar to rewriting it to port it to a new platform, and that's a huge investment for such old software, plus it leaves lots of room for something to break during the update (what updates don't already break something and need maintenance afterwards?).

    The biggest limitation of PS2 is RAM, followed by processing power, followed by the size of the hard drive and limitations of the hard drive file system. If the PS2 HDD software and game were rereleased on disc without the requirement of the Sony HDD firmware to detect the drive, we could use a bigger hard drive, and have multiple partitions for the game to bypass the filesystem limitations. PS3 doesn't use custom drive firmware, but PS2 did, even though you could use a hard drive without it as long as you used software like Linux that didn't scan the firmware.

    Quote Originally Posted by rog View Post
    Nah, they can't do anything. It was just a scare tactic to get people who don't know any better to stay away.

    However i do agree with your first paragraph. Some of the things they've done lately is rather disappointing, to say the least.
    The California court just granted them subpoenas to find out the IP addresses/account names and information of anyone who accessed GeoHot's web site and YouTube videos, which would include mine since Ars Technica linked to them and I followed their links.
    (0)
    Last edited by bungiefan; 03-09-2011 at 07:34 AM.

Tags for this Thread