by Benoit » Thu Feb 26, 2004 4:14 pm
You mean emulation.<p>Agreed. I also emulate games, though most of them I haven't bought.<br>I don't emulate the Phantasy Star games, though. I enjoy them on my Mega Drive, like it was meant to.<br>I did discover the series through emulation, PSO and the magazines, though.<br>The reason in particular why I don't emulate Phantasy Star IV is because of the music. The PAL version of Phantasy Star IV plays its music slower than its NTSC counterparts. So in order to fully enjoy it, I decided to not touch the ROM again. I do still have the ROM on my hard drive, though.<p>As for other games, if I really like them, I'll buy them sooner or later, if possible. I know I bought the originals of Lufia: The fortress of Doom and Lufia II: Rise of the Sinistrals after playing the first one. Not having a SNES, I play them by ROM, but now it's legal. I plan to purchase Mega Man X one of these days.<br>So you could say that emulation promotes purchasing of games, even though the companies don't make money off it. Since I'm now a fan of the Lufia series, I buy the recent games, which does make the company money.<p>Which takes me to the next point: is it okay to emulate older games you don't own?<br>I would say yes, since those games are no longer sold in stores, and thus don't make the companies any loss. Except, of course, when they rerelease the games, like they do now, more and more often.<br>There's even a proposition for a law in the US that would make older ROMs legal if you can't reasonably find them anymore.<p>As for emulation of more recent consoles, that's where I draw the line. It's against the principles of emulation. Emulation was created to allow us to play our older games on our PCs, in case our originals or our consoles were broken, or to enjoy nostalgia on your PC.<br>Making emulators for recent systems like Dreamcast, PSX, N64, GBA and GameCube is against this. They should disappear without a trace. Not only is it against the principles of emulation, it promotes, like you said, piracy.<p>That's my two cents.