• Play PS3 on the PS vita, just like the Wii U
    34 replies, posted
[QUOTE=Funky Pickle;31499615]The Wii U controller is actually a lot more comfortable than it looks, according to a few game journalists.[/QUOTE] Well if you like the feel of faeces in your hands, sure, because it looks like shit.
Mom get the christmas list ready!
[QUOTE=Jurikuer;31499379]I agree that backup managers did in fact ruin everything for any system, however I was talking purely of homebrew. For the most part if game consoles supported homebrew from the get go they wouldn't have these issues [i]as badly[/i]. They'd still have people trying to hack it but as long as the homebrew required authorization from the company first they can at least filter out the shit (improving homebrew quality) and keep a closer eye on illegitimate hacks. Updates can be made to block these hacks and any legit owner will avoid these hacks. And face it, if anyone wanted to hack their systems for illegitimate reasons, they'll find a way. There is nothing you can do to stop it. So there is no point in trying. But it doesn't mean you can't support the homebrew community. [editline]2nd August 2011[/editline] You can't use hackers as an excuse for poor PSP titles because it's the companys who have failed the consumers by making shitty games in the first place. So PSP owners said, "okay well these games suck, might as well hack my system since there is no point in updating it."[/QUOTE] Well, no. That is true that the launch line-up was pretty abysmal compared to other handhelds of the time. People lost faith in the PSP really quickly. And homebrew is kind of the saving grace for people who cling on to theirs still. Some of it is pretty cool, and have authorized homebrew would probably save a lot of the problems like security and stability risks you have with the current homebrew. Having a community store style thing where people can upload any application, get it verified and give it away freely would be a great thing for a console to support, but kind of like Apple, companies would pull programs down if it replicates functionality (though they seem to have stopped doing that on some apps). And probably never authorize the useful things like emulators and boot loaders than the open homebrew can provide.
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