Bootlegedness does not affect playability
It's so that if you look through the shell and see only one original PCB, typically people assume the other is legit and don't bother opening it.No, It plays perfectly, but I don’t understand why a Bootleg uses one original PCB.
It's so that if you look through the shell and see only one original PCB, typically people assume the other is legit and don't bother opening it.
Not sure why someone would do that. I think the most likely scenario here is that the CHA board went bad so someone replaced it with one from a bootleg.It's so that if you look through the shell and see only one original PCB, typically people assume the other is legit and don't bother opening it.
It's so that if you look through the shell and see only one original PCB, typically people assume the other is legit and don't bother opening it.
Not sure why someone would do that. I think the most likely scenario here is that the CHA board went bad so someone replaced it with one from a bootleg.
This is a gray area. In most cases repairs are more minor than this - replaced one or two chips, patched some traces, etc. In those cases it's good practice to note the repairs when selling.That sounds more realistic, but when it’s a repaired game, does this makes the game a Bootleg also?