

NOTE: still experimental, can cause cutscenes where you lose player control to get stuck, otherwise seems to work as intended. Doubles walk speed AND allows for diagonal movement. PSIII Turbo (file link is at bottom of page) - an interesting attempt at increasing PS3 walking speed. If you want to mix it with another hack, make sure to apply this one first. Unfortunately it doesn't play too well with other hacks in the mix and can cause undesirable effects, but as a stand-alone seems to work as intended. Does exactly what it says, with some caveats. PSIII Double Experience/Meseta - something I made on my own, using the Aridia app, after I noticed didn't already have one besides as a feature within the Nial Edition hack. PSIII enemy formations hack - increases game difficulty by maximizing enemy group encounters, includes other changes. PSIII Color Hack - alters graphical palettes for Rhys -> Ayn -> Sean quest line to be brighter and more colorful. PSIII Alternate Font - another font choice if the default or patch-exclusive fonts don't tickle your fancy. Here it is as a stand alone patch:ĮDIT: here's some other stand-alone patches, they may or may not play nice when added to an already-patched rom: Apparently this was standard in the Japanese versions but for some reason localizations disabled the bottom half from moving. Some of the patches come with an optional patch that enables complete parallax scrolling in battle (normally, only the sky or top layer does any scrolling but with this patch, the ground or bottom layer also scrolls. If you need something a little more in-depth, you can always consult each patch's READMEs for breakdowns of what exactly they do. With this one should be able to determine what patch would most suit their needs. For those who have dabbled in both hacks and retro achievements, is there a way to modify a ROM but still have it keep whatever info it needs to be recognized for achievements? The stuff I mainly add are QoL, including fan translations and restoring cut content, or simple improvements.

Any developer can add these hashes but depending on the change it might not be allowed due to giving an unfair advantage." Once you load a game up the emulator checks the hash and if it matches any tied to a set you'll get an achievement list.

"A file produces a unique MD5 hash that gets linked to a set. I asked about it in RA's forums, and this was the only answer I got: Problem is that it seems hacking a ROM may make the game unrecognizable for the Retro Achievement app to pick up (it requires a WiFi connection and RetroArch, along with a user account for the site). I figure this might be the best place to ask: I've added a few of the great ROM hacks listed here in the past, and recently I've started using Retro Achievements to earn.well, retro achievements.
