Celebrating its 10th anniversary, Tales of Vesperia is one of the most beloved entries in the 'Tales of' series and returns with beautifully remastered full HD.
A subreddit for fans of the 'Tales of' series published by Namco Bandai! Notable ReleasesSearch by FlairRelated Websites and GroupsRelated Subreddits Tales.General.Publishers.Series.Subreddit Policy Be nice, and don't be rude. No NSFW content.
Tag all spoilers. No Let's Plays/stream links Spoiler TagsPlease be considerate about spoilers! Not everyone has played every game, so if you want to post about things that might be considered spoilers, please use the spoiler tag on your post and choose your title carefully so people won't be spoiled just by reading it.For spoilers in textposts and comments use spoiler tags as follows:!Repede is a good boy.! Repede is a good boy.Flair/banner images from,. So, my imported copy of Vesperia arrives tomorrow and I already jailbroke my ps3. I've read the instructions and I kind of got the general idea.
Having said that, I need help with 2 steps:-'Get your Tales of Vesperia (PS3) game files'-'Acquire ebootMOD'The first one doesn't seem to be complicated, but if someone could tell me how to do it(which homebrew or something), it'd really make things easier.However, I don't even understand what the second one means. The original text is: 'To modify EBOOT.BIN, we need a way to de- and encrypt it.
For legal reasons, we cannot provide a tool to do this, so you'll have to find it yourself. Place all files from ebootMOD into the provided empty 'ebootmod' folder, so that the executable can be found at./ebootmod/ebootMOD.exe'.I have two questions about that:1- What is ebootMOD?
A homebrew?2- What kind of tool I need and why is it illegal(I wouldn't mind if someone sent me info about this on pm)?I would really appreciate if anyone could be of help. I am beaming with excitement to play this game. Thanks in advance. Sources are hard as i read a piece explaining this like 6 months ago. Upload photo using fetch. Basically its a grey area, because noone has been charged in NA/EU/JP in the last decade for this. There are lots of really strong arguments for and against, but nothing hard evidence / legal precedent wise to go off of.
The closest thing we had was about 2 years ago square threatened a major lawsuit about it publicly, but then backed right the hell off as the accuser stood there ground and said they were not afraid and would take them to court.and while were on the topic of this, sense this is also a game translation, did you know that noone has ever gone / had charges for a fan game translation. All that has happened is people get DMCA, scared, and stop. Noone has ever been taken into law and forced to stop.
(this however is also a grey area with strong arguments for and against. The biggest thing someone explained, was it produces money for the company for free, and thus far no company has been stupid enough to actually take someone to court as the company loses money nomatter what. All that has happened legally, is companies grandstanding with DMCA and likewise, without actually taking anyone to court)unfortunatly, this still means its all one unknown legal area that people only base their actions on morales. But you gotta make your own morales eventually right? I personally think (agree with CSFFLAME) if you legally own something, you should be able to watch/listen/play that thing. In any case, sense the major argument against is that the target publisher loses money on a sale, you'd have a hard time convincing me its not legal when they are getting money for a sale.