Zombie James
Banned
What a novel invention.
Nintendo aren't exactly known for doing anything only to appease shareholders.I can see official Nintendo emulators happening, if only to appease shareholders.
Yamauchi must've showed up to iwata in a dream
It's likely only to prevent others from selling and supplying homebrew Game Boy emulators on Android/Google marketplaces as those two seemingly don't give a shit about preventing them.
not that they should prevent them, imo.
^^^^^^I assume this is to stamp on fan-made Android GBA emulators.
Rösti;140650261 said:
If that were Nintendo's aim it would've already happened by now. Nintendo started filing patents like these over a decade ago, it's clearly defensive.As much as I'd love to see these games on more platforms it's probably just to go after emulator developers.
And tomorrow they are part of Disney.
Would be funny to see the meltdown.
That doesn't say anything about legal emulation (i.e. Nintendo releasing their own emulator and selling games for it); it only says Nintendo wouldn't support an emulator that can play illegally-downloaded ROMs. I can see official Nintendo emulators happening, if only to appease shareholders.
Sounds like it's going to be used to remove all these emulators on mobile devices. This will force people to buy Nintendo products to play Nintendo games.
SonyToo!™;140653189 said:Didn't Nintendo at one point announce that they were looking at developing for mobile gaming in some limited capacity? If so this might be it.
So basically this makes all GB emulators illegal?
These illustrations are straight out of 1998.
Relatedly, I was thinking of the last time I bought any Nintendo product and I came up with 2011 (Skyward Sword). Three years without giving them a dime.
Nintendo's been doing emulation the entire time too though. First commercial use was in 1998 on N64 with the Pokémon games through the transfer pack used in Pokémon Stadium. The 64DD was also announced to be able to download and play NES games (sort of a proto-Virtual Console).There's nearly 20 years of prior art here at this point. I can't imagine that such a patent would ever be granted.
Nintendo's legal team just popped a boner.
don't know the details of copyright law but I think it should be illegal to make/win a patent for something that already exist.
Sounds like it's going to be used to remove all these emulators on mobile devices. This will force people to buy Nintendo products to play Nintendo games.
I assume this is to stamp on fan-made Android GBA emulators.
sörine;140654950 said:Nintendo's been doing emulation the entire time too though. First commercial use was in 1998 on N64 with the Pokémon games through the transfer pack used in Pokémon Stadium. The 64DD was also announced to be able to download and play NES games (sort of a proto-Virtual Console).
That was my thought as well. Now they can stop everyone emulating the games.
Reading the abstract, I have to wonder once again how the hell you can patent things that have been published, common practice for a decade.
But I wonder that all the time with patents.
I mean, for example, selective frame skipping is an exemplary feature? Emulators have been doing this since the early 90s -- probably earlier but I wouldn't know for sure.