My understanding of a port is an exact version of the original, no changes made. I guess some people would define that differently. I'd call the Megaman Battle Network 1 DS "remake" a port since all they added was a bottom screen map and one side story, other than that it was exactly the same as the GBA game down to the sprites and BGM. Or the resent Sonic Classics that was found to be a fancy emulator playing the original games themselves. Again, no real changes. Mario 64 DS was a graphical upgrade, slight story tweaking, and overall gameplay change, and a big change from the original in the end. I wouldn't call Mario 64 DS a port by any means.In the realm of computer programming, a "port" is the opposite of emulation for bringing a program to a different system. It's where the source is recompiled for the new architecture (since they have the source they can make changes), as opposed to translating the precompiled machine code on the fly.
Donald Serrot said:
As for the Wii VC upgrades it was listed in Nintendo Power back when they first started putting N64 games up. Even showed side by side screenshots. Star Fox 64 was the example they showed. In essence they would not be playable on their original systems because of the upgrades. I haven't played too many of the N64 VC games mostly due to lack of money/points and any of the good ones I still have the original N64 game of. And on the flip not I haven't looked too much into how they work either, so they probably could be just ports with a clean coat of paint.I don't read nintendo power so my best guess is just running it at a higher resolution and perhaps some texture filtering, both of which emulators are capable of doing.
QUOTE(Donald Serrot @ Apr 28 2010, 10:53 AM)
And most likely the PSP was made with some PSX backwards compatibility just to make it easier for them to release ports of older games like Persona, and as a result making emulation much much easier for those games. It would be logical that games made for a Sony system would play better on a Sony system than a game made for a non-Sony system just to begin with.