Anbernic has released a new firmware update for their RGXX line of devices. But with it came a highly controversial app that could skew how these handhelds and the retro community are viewed by the masses.
With the RGXX lines of devices, Anbernic has carved out a space in the retro community for budget, but “powerful enough” devices that net decent performance for most consoles up to the PS1. Relying on the H700 chipset inside, the devices rarely feature any other frills other than the overall design.
Because of their abundance, there are numerous CFW options available for gamers to use on any of the RGXX devices, like muOS, MinUI, or Knulli.
Piracy in the Limelight
Alongside these is the default Anbernic stock OS. Today, the stock firmware received an update, and it contains a new app that is seemingly solely used for downloading games for a variety of different consoles with little to no hassle.
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The piracy app in question; Image via HyperPlay RPG
In the app, users can sort games by app-based recommendations, top downloads, or emulators. They can also search for a title and simply hit a download button and have it properly configured inside of the handheld’s game selection screen.
By having an app like this pre-installed on their devices going forward, Anbernic introduces a hurdle that the retro community has been dealing with since its inception. The hobby isn’t primarily built around the idea of piracy, and many content creators (RH included) strongly advise against it.
The retro gaming community hones in on the idea of reliving past nostalgia through these devices. For some, being able to have a collection of their own personal collection stored in their pocket, on a device that rivals their phone in size, makes the hobby captivating.
Is This Expected?
Numerous companies, including Anbernic, sell their devices with an optional SD card. That included SD card is usually flooded with poor rips and sometimes non-functional ROMs for various consoles. In most areas of the retro community, users will recommend people abandon the included SD card and replace it with a higher quality one with their own backups of games.
Anbernic has been one of the leaders in retro handhelds for quite some time. From their RG351 series devices up to their newest handheld, the RG34XX, the company has prioritized creating devices that make playing retro games easy and with a dash of nostalgia from the devices of yesterday.
However, with this new addition to their official firmware, it seems the company is slowly inching closer and closer to being associated with outright piracy. Being a Chinese company, the laws, regulations, and how they’re applied to those who may violate them differs from how things would normally be handled in the US. Because of that, we have no idea where this saga will end, or if it will at all.
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Ssssshhhh….
Don’t be so loud
Thanks for the photo credit. Feel free to link our YouTube vid in the body of the article too, if you like.
Best wishes
Peter
Editor
HyperPlay RPG
They are based in China. If you think anything will happen to them then you are mistaken. Also, I hate that people post articles like this and blow projects cover. It’s like when people start talking about a mod and then it gets shut down. Just stay quiet and then release it when done so it’s out there.
We like piracy, we don’t like you trying to make it a problem for us.
Oh no!
The device that is used exclusively for piracy by 95% of the people that buy it included am app for pirating!
….anyway.
yeah for real guys lmao it’s so funny how most publications take this moral high ground anti-piracy stance when literally the entire point of the devices is to play rom libraries. who is actually ripping their gameboy games and putting them on an SD card? who is only downloading games they have physical copies of? are you as the writer even doing that??? the truth of the matter is emulators and roms of old games are de facto public data at this point, and no human being is materially impacted by this. enjoy the hobby for what it is, and take your moralising and righteousness to a cause that actually means something. the US is literally in a fascist death spiral, who cares about outdated copyright laws and hypothetical impacts on the profits of corporations.
This article sounds a bit hypocrit to me. Of course you encourage piracy. What else ? How many tutorials on how to configure such devices, and none on how to simply rip your very own collection.
I wish that for every review of every device, each RH member shows his original cartrige and the devices he used to rip them.
Yeah, this is bad. It’s tough for the emulation scene to claim legitimacy when front-ends facilitate piracy.