The emulator being 3dSen, direct link to Steam: https://store.steampowered.com/app/1147940/3dSen_PC/
I just gave it a download. Tested Mega Man 2, and now I’m playing Super Mario Bros. It’s really fucking cool
Submitted 12 hours ago by simple@piefed.social to games@lemmy.world
The emulator being 3dSen, direct link to Steam: https://store.steampowered.com/app/1147940/3dSen_PC/
I just gave it a download. Tested Mega Man 2, and now I’m playing Super Mario Bros. It’s really fucking cool
Zelda 1 seems an odd omission from the supported games. I wonder if some games are harder to implement than others or something.
It also works with romhacks if the graphics aren’t changed too much. Ducktales 2 co-op works like a charm!
how does it work?
Each game needs to have a custom profile created to render in 3D. From the linked article:
3dSen is an emulator that lets you play 2D NES games in 3D. Its programmers have to create a custom profile for it to work its magic on each game, which means there are currently 100 supported games, including Contra, Super Mario Bros, Batman, Castlevania, Bubble Bobble, and Gradius.
And from another article:
…with the addition of the 3dSenMaker tool, community members now can handcraft 3D profiles for their favorite games.
Didn’t know about this. This is amazing.
Bought it a few years ago. Super cool, though I probably only messed around with it a couple hours before forgetting about it.
They want money for an emulator? that’s bold
Maybe, but it’s not just emulating the rom, I thinks there’s enough value add for their $9 asking price.
$9 on sale, but $15 normally.
Still, being able to argue they’re not for profit is what typically has protected emulators from being sued to oblivion (and with Nintendo, even that’s risky)…
Vaggumon@lemmy.zip 11 hours ago
How long till Nintendo files.
entwine413@lemm.ee 10 hours ago
I’m not sure they can in this instance. The reason they could sue the Switch emulator team was because they were using a proprietary encryption key.
I don’t think the NES had that, and as long as you own the game, emulation is legal.
glitchdx@lemmy.world 9 hours ago
Nintendo was able to sue palworld using a patent that didn’t exist before palworlds release. It’s not right, but they can do whatever they want regardless of what the law says.
callouscomic@lemm.ee 8 hours ago
People say this, but I believe it is mostly technically untrue. It’d be a relatively easy argument to say that a downloaded ROM that isn’t exactly the digital copy YOU purchased with a license would be seen as not legal.
However some people talk about literally ripping the game off the physical device themselves, hence copying their own copy of it. Now you are in grey territory of making copies of copyrighted materials, and in the case of more modern games like the last decade, they almost assuredly have language that specifies you don’t actually own the code and all that.
All I’m saying is be careful and probably refrain from repeating the fallacy that owning a game makes emulation of it legal, because that implies having the ROM is legal and that’s doubtful.
9point6@lemmy.world 10 hours ago
I wonder if Steam would remove it from people’s libraries in that instance or just the Storefront