If it's online I agree shouldn't be cheats
But offline games no one on gbatemp of all places should applaud Activision. There's been cheat codes for offline games since NES and it was never a problem.
Videogame cheating is a widespread issue worldwide, more so with highly popular online franchises lilke Grand Theft Auto and Call of Duty. Some people even attempt to make a money out of creating cheat codes and selling them out in the internet...
Agree.
Some count Shattered Memories as a remake of 1, but that hardly counts as an entry in the main series.
I feel like SH1 and SH3 are the most directly tied out of all the games, and SH1 does require a remake out of all the other games in the...
Coming from someone that hated the transition from RE4 to RE5, after giving the latest entries a try, I can for sure guarantee that they're doing the best work they can at reimagining and keeping Resident Evil still relevant is such a highly...
Capcom has done an amazing job with the newer RE games so there's plenty for all, now, why not focus on IPs that are semi dead / forgotten? Such as... Power Stone.
That said, I'm interested seeing what Konami does with Silent Hill.
The P.T...
Since Silent Hill: The Short Message released at the end of January, there hasn't been much Silent Hill news since then outside of a combat trailer for the Silent Hill 2 Remake, given the huge amount of franchise-related titles that were...
That'd be interesting to see for sure.
I even wonder if games with special RSP code will eventually be handlede by the Recomp tool, I'd give my life for a RE2 recomp.
Back in the mid 2000s, the gaming scene saw a whole slew of exclusive games released for portable cellphones, with a wide variety of them running under a build of Java for mobile phones, and in the case of Mega Man, the franchise saw quite a...
Only in places where law is enforced and people give a damn.
In summary, if the source code is open, anyone can and will do anything with it, "license" be damned.
"No one will know if there is no one to know".
This article is great mainly...
Have there been any kind of self-hosted projects based on GitLab that have been taken down?
It'd be certainly good to take a good look if any instance of that have occurred for reference and better recommendations.
I'm surprised this was kept in the article, it contradicts with itself. He lists a few individual GitLab instances which are free to ignore DCMA requests (gitgud.io has a bunch of projects that were hosted elsewhere but ended up nuked somehow for...