Things were more laid back in the 1970s and ’80s, when code was stored unencrypted in standard EPROM chips, or, for high-volume applications, in mask ROMs integrated in microcontrollers.
Things were more laid back in the 1970s and ’80s, when code was stored unencrypted in standard EPROM chips, or, for high-volume applications, in mask ROMs integrated in microcontrollers.
Happy to announce the Majora’s Mask decompilation project reached 100 ... it creates an executable that can be combined with a (legally acquired) ROM of the game. It combines the new code with ...