• TWeaK@lemm.ee
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    8 months ago

    To be clear: apple removed an emulator that was a blatant rip off of an open source emulator but full of ads and tracking. The original emulator is still up.

    • Anas@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      The original emulator is still up.

      GBA4iOS was never on the App Store, was it?

      • TCB13@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        GBA4iOS was never on the App Store, was it?

        No, and it will never be because Riley Testut seem to be as greedy as Apple.

        Look he was right, but he’s kind of removed, he can just release GBA4iOS on the App Store and people will use it instead of that crap filled with ads. What if he just had summited GBA4iOS to the App Store before this developer? Oh I know why, because he’s trying to get his AltStore approved and wanted to have GBA4iOS exclusively there to drive people into it.

  • w3dd1e@lemm.ee
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    8 months ago

    I’m hoping with the easing up of emulators and game streaming that Nintendo and Sega would just put official emulators up. Honestly, I’d pay them for access to one and to related games.

    I know this is mostly wishful thinking but, a woman can dream.

    • JasonDJ@lemmy.zip
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      8 months ago

      Right?

      Like, I get it Nintendo, you want money. That’s understandable.

      Then let me buy the damn games. I’d love to be able to buy roms to run in an official emulator, or ideally any emulator.

      Honestly at this point why even bother with DRM. The roms for classic systems are absurdly easy to get. Hell even switch roms. But Nintendo insists the only way to play retro games legitimately is to buy either a monthly subscription, or a copy of the rom bundled with the official emulator that can only be run on that specific generation console, or buy dedicated system for it.

      And even then its only the games they put out on the system/marketplace/subscription service. A tiny fraction of the library.

    • graymess@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      Now that emulation is allowed on iOS, I would think this is the worst time for either of them to start selling ROMs for iPhones. If Nintendo launched a Virtual Console app years ago? Easy money, no question. Captive audience in a closed ecosystem. Now? If I open the app store and see an app that can play Pokemon Red/Blue for free right next to an app from Nintendo that charges me $5 - $10 for the same experience, why would I pay?

      Regardless, Nintendo wouldn’t even try to sell you ROMs these days anyway. They’ll sell you a subscription service like they do on Switch. No thanks. I’m good with the emulation we have now.

  • Rexios@lemm.ee
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    8 months ago

    And yet Apple approved the app in the first place. Have some consistent policy enforcement ffs.