Wireframe - #33 - 2020

(Barry) #1

ODE, or not ODE?


Piracy. It’s about piracy. People want ODEs


  • optical drive emulators – and their ilk
    because that means they can download
    games illegally, put them on an SD card
    or a USB stick or whatever, and then play
    them in the original hardware without
    needing the original disc. Let’s not ignore
    that factor – let’s put it right here at the
    beginning of this braindump. Anyone who
    claims an ODE isn’t used in the most part
    for piracy is wrong, or a liar. But with every
    month, year, decade that passes, the
    claim these fine feats of engineering are
    solely the purview of those who love grog
    and pieces o’ eight actually loses a bit of
    truth, and the disclaimer everyone puts on
    their eBay auction about ‘this device isn’t
    for piracy’ actually becomes a bit truer.


Because we’re losing our games. Slowly
but surely, the inevitability of atrophy – or
disc rot, or just catastrophic data loss


  • means little-known gems, well-known
    classics from formats nobody cares about
    anymore, mediocre things you’d not care
    about if you even did remember them:
    they’re all going extinct. The hardware
    tends to be a) more robust, and b) easier
    to actually fix if something goes wrong:
    that’s not the problem here. The problem
    is the actual data storage mediums – right
    now, floppy disks and tapes are dropping
    left and right (so floppy disk drive/tape
    emulators, rather than ODEs), and it won’t
    be too long until CDs and eventually,
    DVDs, go the same way. We’re losing our
    games, we’re losing history, and optical


drive emulators can actually provide a
genuine archiving service – something
far better than what you get through PC-
based emulation.
For now, I think ODEs will remain the
preserve of a tiny niche of the retro
community – flashcarts, like the Everdrive,
Mega SD, and so on are better known
I’d guess, but are still niche. And popular
opinion will remain on the side of the
Good And True gaming companies with
regards to the legality of these hardware
modifications. But slowly, the tide will
turn, and we’ll have to wonder: were they
legitimately meant as preservation tools
all along? And the answer will still be no.
It’s about piracy. This safeguarding of
history aspect was a happy little accident.

Superstar hero


Did you know there is an ongoing effort to
update Sensible World of Soccer each and
every year? You did? Oh. Well, I didn’t, and
it’s blown my tiny mind. Bringing modern
squads into Sensible Software’s Amiga (and
PC, I suppose) classic is step one, but then
there’s making it work on modern systems
(and the Amiga), and then there’s making
it work online too. SWOS 2020 is, in short,
brilliant and everyone should be aware of it.
wfmag.cc/SWOS

WRITTEN BY IAN ‘DYNAMO’ DRANSFIELD

64 / wfmag.cc


Backwards compatible

Retro

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