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PSPTetris (through wip3out browser)

neptunes

Member
psptetris8hn.jpg

Controls
Use left/right on the PSP’s directional pad to move a block, down to drop, and X to rotate. You can pause the game by using the PSP’s power button (sleep mode). This way, you should be able to actually take the PSP away from the wireless network (it will disconnect anyways) and play PSPTetris anywhere as long as you don’t change the pag

http://webtopsp.com/psptetris
 
Nice. How does it play, though? Playing it through javascript should be fine, but I have a feeling it's not too smooth. (IE Not supported, so the page cries, or something)
Also, how does it actually understand the input from the face buttons? What does X mean on the PSP?
Edit:
Just realized, a sideways mode might be a better use of the screen.
 
Is it likely that newer prints of Wipeout Pure will have this "security hole" fixed? Will the original version become a rare/expensive item?
 
Naked Snake said:
Is it likely that newer prints of Wipeout Pure will have this "security hole" fixed? Will the original version become a rare/expensive item?

nah...I don't think it's really an exploit or a security hole anyway.

The Japanese version (that shipped not too long ago) is capable doing the same thing.
 
Naked Snake said:
Is it likely that newer prints of Wipeout Pure will have this "security hole" fixed? Will the original version become a rare/expensive item?
It's a DNS thing. They'd have to completely scrap the entire browser. As long as it downloads from a webpage, you can have your own computer redirect the traffic.
The PSO exploit did this but ALSO made use of a buffer-overflow.
 
That's a common misconception. The PSO exploit was actually a feature that was programmed in by Sonic Team, but never used, not a buffer overflow.
 
MegaByte said:
That's a common misconception. The PSO exploit was actually a feature that was programmed in by Sonic Team, but never used, not a buffer overflow.
yeah, it was basically a built in way for sega to patch the game on the fly...
 
I almost thought there was either a Game Boy or an NES emulator via Javascript at one point -- although I'm probably nuts and it was probably Java.

However, you COULD play text adventures this way.
 
Holy crap. That Lemings is so cool. Slow, but cool. I bet it wouldn't fir in the PSP window though.

As for Tetris. I'll have to try it when I get a chance to get my PSP online, but I'd much rather have an actual Tetris on the PSP.

Lumines all the way though.
 
Lemmings in Javascript is pretty much indestiguishable from the original Amiga verson as far as gameplay an in-game graphics. Incredible. It also runs pretty smooth in IE6 on P4 2.4Ghz.
 
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