Tuesday, December 6, 2022

RE: Old Video Games, Board Game Dumps etc. On Old Machines

This is a new fact of science and yet again I always think of Bill Gates....

Back in the 1980's it was the old Arcade and Windows out and Bill Gates beats the jocks with windows and they all did nothing.

Ever since, revenge of the nerds in Hollywood.

Here I mean:

This is a new scientific theory like Digital.

Like my Advanced Dungeons & Dragons game patch that became D20 Dragon Adventures, the updated patch on the abandoned system finished an original model for the game in open source that became my game Dragon Adventures on D20 Open Source.

On the arcade game, the equivalent means that on Pac Mac or Centipede an odd event occurred on circuit board LED light up mode for example.

The master game was programed back in the 1970's inside on the game board for example, and dumps into an exact copy on the arcade game programmer which connects to the circuit board to program the game screens.

A power fluxulation dumped the game maps into the interface showing new levels and insets and game character maps.

This auto loaded millions of new official characters that were saved onto the programmer as new levels and characters in the original game that auto loaded.

Making the programmer instant rich from finding the levels and characters.

I mean, I get sick of this rich guy talk, in my stories I mean they guy gets rich but it takes like twenty make and sell all the products...long term in a market place.

Then he has to sell the characters.

This is a defined theory in computer science already.

All games and computer components contain metals like copper that have the code written on them like on old arcade stand up games.

Over time the board corrosion on the metals can lead to code decay at the microscopic level as the board metal decays over time, this creates fluxulations on the circuit board with the power current and with the metals decayed the characters hard coded on onto the board may lose some meaning because of metal corrosion.

Although the game code is still present, power fluxulations from the power cable, shaking the machine etc. may display the code of the front screens of the game wrong because of the binary code is inaccurate on some of the metal diodes.  

Because of the erosion in the metals.

A power fluxulation creates a mis display on the circuit board that could accidentally output other games onto the board programmer during the fluxulation and create randomly generated new official character and game maps.

During the fluxulation on the random rust decay, the game could display any of infinite calculations on the screen.

Like, electrical signal on board =  100% game display functionality.

Metal corrosion for example could reduce this game display to 99.98 %.

The 00.02 remaining percent of data on the "electrical light up" on the power fluxulation could accidentally create new random generated game code patterns on the same game frame that work in the operational machine.

This would load a one time only display of a new randomly generated auto loaded official games and characters on the screen with full play functionality on the original games.

The one time signal mean current corrosion on the board today, times the random event on the game such as bumping it and have a power cable fluxulation or electrical storm such as lightning could affect the game and create auto loaded new official levels.

If you ever see this on an old arcade game you MUST PRESS SAVE! to save the data maps on the rust decay from the random code generation of the games power fluxulation for that day.

Turning the game off or restarting might lose data worth  millions of dollars in random generated game maps created by power fluxulations on the game board during a metallic erosion event of the game aging, this display might never come up again so always save these screens!

Another example, Pac Mac was displayed as Pac Man with a girls bow on his head as well as Miss. Pac Man on the board light up.

-END-

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