I loved Chrono Trigger. I want the sequel. Problem.IM IN THE BLOODY UK!!!!and it's in the USASo, if I was to get a copy into the UK, would it play on my PS2?
Your community is a bunch of stuck up turds.
Quote from: King Tetiro on February 17, 2009, 10:42:50 amI loved Chrono Trigger. I want the sequel. Problem.IM IN THE BLOODY UK!!!!and it's in the USASo, if I was to get a copy into the UK, would it play on my PS2?No. PAL and NTSC formats, remember?
Quote from: Darklight on February 17, 2009, 11:29:26 amQuote from: King Tetiro on February 17, 2009, 10:42:50 amI loved Chrono Trigger. I want the sequel. Problem.IM IN THE BLOODY UK!!!!and it's in the USASo, if I was to get a copy into the UK, would it play on my PS2?No. PAL and NTSC formats, remember?Was there not some Freeloader-esque software for the PS/PS2? I'm sure there were ways to play import games on PAL-edition Sony consoles...
If I can prove I have the consoles, would an emul be wrong?
well i dont have that system and it is very hard to care about everything when you are single
I suppose. I have got a PS1 and a PS2. So I guess I'm not taking out of Sony's profits. I would be adding.
Quote from: King Tetiro on February 17, 2009, 03:27:57 pmIf I can prove I have the consoles, would an emul be wrong?Wrong is a matter of ethics. Legality wise, its illegal regardless of if you have the console or game. whether you choose to do it or not is up to you.
Quote from: Infini on February 17, 2009, 04:29:10 pmQuote from: King Tetiro on February 17, 2009, 03:27:57 pmIf I can prove I have the consoles, would an emul be wrong?Wrong is a matter of ethics. Legality wise, its illegal regardless of if you have the console or game. whether you choose to do it or not is up to you. Actually, if you owned a copy of the game - and the copy on your computer hard drive was identical to that on the disc of the game - then using an emulator would be legal in the UK. I forget the law exactly, but British law makes allowances of producing copies of copyrighted digital media for personal use. Emulators aren't intrinsically illegal, and owning an additional digital copy of media that you own a license to is also legal.
Quote from: Pyru on February 17, 2009, 06:22:55 pmQuote from: Infini on February 17, 2009, 04:29:10 pmQuote from: King Tetiro on February 17, 2009, 03:27:57 pmIf I can prove I have the consoles, would an emul be wrong?Wrong is a matter of ethics. Legality wise, its illegal regardless of if you have the console or game. whether you choose to do it or not is up to you. Actually, if you owned a copy of the game - and the copy on your computer hard drive was identical to that on the disc of the game - then using an emulator would be legal in the UK. I forget the law exactly, but British law makes allowances of producing copies of copyrighted digital media for personal use. Emulators aren't intrinsically illegal, and owning an additional digital copy of media that you own a license to is also legal.Perhaps, but I'm sure the game/media/music company would screw you over someway if you tried to bring that argument to court.
Quote from: Pyru on February 17, 2009, 06:22:55 pmQuote from: Infini on February 17, 2009, 04:29:10 pmQuote from: King Tetiro on February 17, 2009, 03:27:57 pmIf I can prove I have the consoles, would an emul be wrong?Wrong is a matter of ethics. Legality wise, its illegal regardless of if you have the console or game. whether you choose to do it or not is up to you. Actually, if you owned a copy of the game - and the copy on your computer hard drive was identical to that on the disc of the game - then using an emulator would be legal in the UK. I forget the law exactly, but British law makes allowances of producing copies of copyrighted digital media for personal use. Emulators aren't intrinsically illegal, and owning an additional digital copy of media that you own a license to is also legal.I thought there was a law against it either way, because having the rom on your computer is creating an unautorised copy of the game. Or did they abolish that? orrrr am I thinking of the wrong country here?
Quote from: bertfallen on February 20, 2009, 08:20:07 pmQuote from: Pyru on February 17, 2009, 06:22:55 pmQuote from: Infini on February 17, 2009, 04:29:10 pmQuote from: King Tetiro on February 17, 2009, 03:27:57 pmIf I can prove I have the consoles, would an emul be wrong?Wrong is a matter of ethics. Legality wise, its illegal regardless of if you have the console or game. whether you choose to do it or not is up to you. Actually, if you owned a copy of the game - and the copy on your computer hard drive was identical to that on the disc of the game - then using an emulator would be legal in the UK. I forget the law exactly, but British law makes allowances of producing copies of copyrighted digital media for personal use. Emulators aren't intrinsically illegal, and owning an additional digital copy of media that you own a license to is also legal.I thought there was a law against it either way, because having the rom on your computer is creating an unautorised copy of the game. Or did they abolish that? orrrr am I thinking of the wrong country here?Producing a second copy - or distributing any of the copies - would be unauthorised (I thinkit's only the one copy - I'll explain later why I might be wrong). The first copy is legal in the UK.Works the same for music - however, this would mean that any copies of music on an iPod that were originally ripped off a CD are illegal - the first copy would be on the computer in iTunes.