Super Nintendo

f-zero-courses-from-a-dead-nintendo-satellite-service-restored-using-vhs-and-ai

F-Zero courses from a dead Nintendo satellite service restored using VHS and AI

Ahead of its time and lost in time —

There’s still a $5,000 prize for the original Japanese Satellaview broadcasts.

Box art for the fan modification of F-Zero, BS F-Zero Deluxe

Enlarge / BS F-Zero Deluxe sounds like a funny name until you know that the first part stands for “broadcast satellite.”

Guy Perfect, Power Panda, Porthor

Nintendo’s Satellaview, a Japan-only satellite add-on for the Super Famicom, is a rich target for preservationists because it was the home to some of the most ephemeral games ever released.

That includes a host of content for Nintendo’s own games, including F-Zero. That influential Super Nintendo (Super Famicom in Japan) racing title was the subject of eight weekly broadcasts sent to subscribing Japanese homes in 1996 and 1997, some with live “Soundlink” CD-quality music and voiceovers. When live game broadcasts were finished, the memory cartridges used to store game data would report themselves as empty, even though they technically were not. Keeping that same 1MB memory cartridge in the system when another broadcast started would overwrite that data, and there were no rebroadcasts.

Recordings from some of the F-Zero Soundlink broadcasts on the Satellaview add-on for the Super Famicom (Super Nintendo in the US).

As reported by Matthew Green at Press the Buttons (along with Did You Know Gaming’s informative video), data from some untouched memory cartridges was found and used to re-create some of the content. Some courses, part of a multi-week “Grand Prix 2” event, have never been found, despite a $5,000 bounty offering and extensive effort. And yet, remarkably, the 10 courses in those later broadcasts were reverse-engineered, using a VHS recording, machine learning tools, and some manual pixel-by-pixel re-creation. The results are “north of 99.9% accurate,” according to those who crafted it and exist now as a mod you can patch onto an existing F-Zero ROM.

A re-creation of the “Forest I” level from the lost Satellaview broadcasts, running in a modified F-Zero ROM.

F-Zero Deluxe, as the patched version is called, includes four new racing machines on top of the original four. There are two new “BS-X” Leagues with all the resurrected Satellaview race tracks. And there is “ghost data,” or the ability to race against one of your prior runs on a course, something that F-Zero games helped make popular and was subsequently picked up by other racing games. There is even box art and an instruction booklet. It is a notable feat of game preservation. It thereby makes us nervous that Nintendo and its attorneys will take notice, but one can hope.

Speaking of which, a key tool used for the BS F-Zero Deluxe release comes from engineer FlibidyDibidy. In his efforts to create a “living leaderboard,” he wanted to show every Super Mario Bros. speedrun all at once. That required a side-by-side speedrun tool that could analyze game footage and show exactly what input was being pressed during that frame, then produce an emulation of that footage that was frame-perfect. That tool, Graphite, is currently missing from the author’s website and from GitHub, though a GitLab copy remains. We’ve reached out to FlibidyDibidy for comment on this and will update the post with new information.

F-Zero courses.” height=”446″ src=”https://cdn.arstechnica.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/Screenshot-2024-02-12-at-5.35.51%E2%80%AFPM-300×446.png” width=”300″>

Enlarge / A frame from the machine learning tool Guy Perfect used to read inputs from a VHS recording and re-create long-lost F-Zero courses.

Guy Perfect

Using Graphite as inspiration and having the data from the original Grand Prix broadcast as a baseline, an F-Zero superfan going by Guy Perfect built a tool that could reproduce the controller input from a miraculous VHS copy of the missing second Grand Prix. Following this reverse-project process, Guy Perfect re-created most of the courses and then fine-tuned them with manual frame-by-frame authoring. The backgrounds on the courses required the work of a pixel artist, Power Panda, to finish the package, and Porthor to round out the trio.

Their work means that, 25 years later, a moment in gaming that was nearly lost to time and various corporate currents has been, if not entirely restored, brought as close as is humanly (and machine-ably) possible to what it once was. Here’s hoping the results, which by all indications are fan-created and non-commercial, stick around for a while.

F-Zero courses from a dead Nintendo satellite service restored using VHS and AI Read More »

resident-evil-kart’s-fixed-camera-angles-make-for-a-charmingly-frustrating-classic

Resident Evil Kart’s fixed camera angles make for a charmingly frustrating classic

As it was meant to be played —

“WELCOME TO THE WORST THING I HAVE EVER CREATED!”

Is this <em>Super Mario Kart</em> or <em>Where’s Waldo</em>?” src=”https://cdn.arstechnica.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/rekart-800×694.png”></img><figcaption>
<p><a data-height=Enlarge / Is this Super Mario Kart or Where’s Waldo?

Here at Ars, we’re big fans of emulators and ROM hacks that actually improve on the limitations of classic games in some way or another. Today, though, we’ve found ourselves enamored with a Super Mario Kart ROM patch that easily makes the game much, much worse.

Longtime Super Mario Kart hacker MrL314 calls Resident Evil Kart “the worst thing I have ever created,” and it’s not hard to see why. As implied by the title, the ROM patch replaces Super Mario Kart‘s usual over-the-shoulder tracking camera with something more akin to the awkward fixed-angle “perspective shots” of the original PlayStation 1 Resident Evil games. The perspective automatically jumps between these fixed cameras around the track as your racer moves from section to section, forcing you to judge turns and obstacles from very skewed angles.

Resident Evil Kart release trailer.

MrL314 writes that the idea for this hack arose from time spent “researching how the camera system in Super Mario Kart works” as part of the development of the impressive-looking Super Mario Kart Deluxe. He first posted a concept video of the fixed camera system in SMK last July, before sharing an early prototype with his Patreon supporters.

Back then, he said, “this thing is a NIGHTMARE to play, but honestly I might actually release a polished version of it, since it is kinda cool honestly.” On Wednesday, he followed through with that plan, releasing a final version of Resident Evil Kart to the public as a ROM patch (which requires an original, unheadered, US Super Mario Kart ROM to be playable).

Watch where you’re going!

After playing the newly released public version of the hack this afternoon, we feel that MrL314 is, underselling just how difficult the fixed camera angle makes the game. The vagaries of the Super Nintendo’s Mode 7 scaling mean your racer is often reduced to a small blob of pixels that only give a vague indication of their true position and orientation on the course (a combination with that high-resolution Mode 7 mod might have helped on that score). Then, just when you’ve kind of gotten used to navigating from one perspective, the camera suddenly jumps to a new location and angle, forcing you to realign yourself on the fly.

A new perspective makes this ghost house even scarier.

Enlarge / A new perspective makes this ghost house even scarier.

Still, after a little practice, I found this “Nightmare” mode wasn’t impossible. With a few practice races, I could finish in first place on the first two Mushroom Cup tracks (at 50cc, at least) before finally giving up on Ghost Valley 1 and its destructible side barriers. Players who find it all too overwhelming can also cheat by glancing at the fixed, three-quarters Super Off-Road-style map view on the bottom half of the screen.

If nothing else, Resident Evil Kart makes us wonder what other classic games might take on new life just by changing their camera angles. Already, we’ve seen versions of Super Mario Bros. played from a first-person perspective and Virtua Racing played from the game’s dynamic “Live Camera” perspective. But how about reimagining Star Fox 64 as a top-down shoot-em-up or a first-person, VR version of Bubble Bobble? The sky’s the limit here, people.

Resident Evil Kart’s fixed camera angles make for a charmingly frustrating classic Read More »