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posted by martyb on Friday September 22 2017, @04:50AM   Printer-friendly
from the eeht-ot-lleweraf dept.

Kotaku runs a story about the game that "spontaneously" unlocks on the date of the death of Satoru Iwata:

When a Switch owner named Setery told a gaming forum about how NES Golf randomly appeared on her Switch's screen, commenters accused her console of being haunted. Switch hackers' subsequent race to unearth NES Golf now indicates that there's a hidden game on the console and, actually, it appears to be a heartwarming tribute to the deceased Nintendo CEO Satoru Iwata.

[...] Prior to heading Nintendo, Iwata was a programmer... The story goes that, after several developers turned down the task of developing the NES's Golf, Iwata found a way to fit the game's 18-hole course onto a cartridge's modest memory.

On July 11th, 2015, Iwata succumbed to cancer at age 55. As Nintendo CEO, Iwata was known for his "Iwata Asks" column on Nintendo's website and his appearances at major Nintendo events. Thanks to Nintendo Directs, he also became associated with a very specific gesture.

[...] Fast forward to early summer, 2017, when hackers discovered a hidden NES emulator on the Switch referred to as "Flog," Ars Technica reports. "We thought they had included it during manufacturing by mistake," Plutoo, one of the Switch hackers... Last weekend, bored, Plutoo decided to look into it. ... He says he discovered two intriguing details: "The code looked for the date July 11th, and the code right before seemed to enable the 'Joycon sixaxis' motion sensors."

[...] And the motion laid out in the code's numbers, he said, appeared to match Iwata's famous Nintendo Direct gesture. Pluuto and his co-conspirators knew that July 11th was the day Iwata passed away, and also that he programmed NES Golf back in the '80s. Also, obviously, that "Flog" is "golf" spelled backwards.

[...] Here's the problem: The Switch knows what day it is. As long as the Switch has been connected to the internet and updated, users can't seem to fool the system into thinking it's the day that will trigger Golf to appear. An internet user going by Fiskerdin, ..., happened to have an unboxed Switch lying around his house. ... "I booted the unopened Switch up, did the setup procedure, and decided to try it out the gesture which was posted," he explained over email. "I simply put both Joy-cons parallel to each other and pointed towards the ground, then raised them in a vertical position and waited, the screen turned blank, an audible cue was played, and then I was greeted with the Golf menu."

[...] Hearing about the memorial, Kotaku East reporter Brian Ashcraft pointed me to the the Japanese tradition of Omamori, which refers to "guide or protect."
Traditionally, they are talismans made of silk and paper left at shrines. Now, they're made out of all sorts of things, like toys or memory cards, which could help protect digital security. They channel spirits who will help guide the Omomori-owner.

It's refreshing to see a gaming/hacker story that doesn't focus on the number of cores, price and consumer electronics, but on ingenuity, respect and tradition.


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 22 2017, @07:46PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 22 2017, @07:46PM (#571763)

    Summary a little disjointed - better to rephrase than to quote chunks maybe? Good article though.