Hail Discordia!
TASVideos has launched an ongoing list of TASes verified on consoles:
http://tasvideos.org/ConsoleVerified.html
If the idea catches on enough for more NESbots to be produced and distributed, the process will definitely accelerate. I don't expect even a quarter of our movies to be verified this way if only because how much of a pain and financial expense it is to locate the required carts, but if it's done for at least the more popular and/or glitched titles, it's already good enough I suppose.
Those of you with large NES collections could probably help by sending carts for verification to those having a NESbot (currently only its author has one), or getting/building a NESbot yourself. I'm guessing this could be useful for runners that would like to try more advanced glitches, like in Mega Man series or whatnot.
As said earlier, the mere existence of such device does invoke some more headache for SDA verifiers, but there are good sides to it, too. Such as at least knowing about it. It may call for more scrutiny or additional footage in analyzing highly competed runs, but at the end of the day such measures will give more confidence in purity of the product.
Correct. It's actually one of the very few SNES games to not have a complete low-level emulation yet. But it's getting there!
http://tasvideos.org/ConsoleVerified.html
If the idea catches on enough for more NESbots to be produced and distributed, the process will definitely accelerate. I don't expect even a quarter of our movies to be verified this way if only because how much of a pain and financial expense it is to locate the required carts, but if it's done for at least the more popular and/or glitched titles, it's already good enough I suppose.
Those of you with large NES collections could probably help by sending carts for verification to those having a NESbot (currently only its author has one), or getting/building a NESbot yourself. I'm guessing this could be useful for runners that would like to try more advanced glitches, like in Mega Man series or whatnot.
As said earlier, the mere existence of such device does invoke some more headache for SDA verifiers, but there are good sides to it, too. Such as at least knowing about it. It may call for more scrutiny or additional footage in analyzing highly competed runs, but at the end of the day such measures will give more confidence in purity of the product.
Quote from VorpalEdge:
The problem is that x2 uses a special chip. Its logic is fully emulated but its lag is not.
Correct. It's actually one of the very few SNES games to not have a complete low-level emulation yet. But it's getting there!