Cancelled Xbox 360 version of GoldenEye 007 gets recompiled for PC — ‘No emulator, the game runs as a real native executable,’ insists dev
GoldenEye Recomp v1.0 has been released, providing 'a native PC port of GoldenEye 007 built by statically recompiling the original game into C++' with no emulation involved.
Cancelled Xbox 360 version of GoldenEye 007 gets recompiled for PC — ‘No emulator, the game runs as a real native executable,’ insists dev Enjoy this Rare classic with a modern Windows controller, online multiplayer, post-FX filters, and at great frame rates. Goldeneye Recomp v1.0 has been released on GitHub by developer SunJaycy. Gaming-focused social media channels are excited with this release, which provides “a native PC port of GoldenEye 007 (Xbox 360 / XBLA), built by statically recompiling the original game into C++ with the ReXGlue SDK,” states the dev. “No emulator — the game runs as a real native executable.” I played the original Nintendo 64 classic for hours in the late 1990s, but this version comes with numerous benefits, including support for modern Windows controllers, online multiplayer, widescreen support, and post-FX filters, all at a purported stable 60 FPS frame rate. GoldenEye was a seminal release for consoles, establishing that FPS games were a compelling proposition beyond the realms of PCs and keyboard/mouse control. Nintendo / Rare showed that slick, responsive FPS controls were possible on a console, and it felt good to play, with widespread praise from both reviewers and fans. In effect, GoldenEye trailblazed this genre on consoles, thanks in part to the N64’s 3D power and sensitive analog controller. Without its strong approval, we may not have seen the subsequent console developments/releases of games like Perfect Dark, Timesplitters, and many more. Though it may be exciting for old GoldenEye N64 players (and even those who’ve only experienced the game on N64 emulators), getting the GoldenEye 007 — PC Recompilation installed isn’t a cinch right now. As SunJaycy highlights on the GitHub page for the project, “This repository contains no game code or assets. It is only the source that wraps the game (menus, hooks, online, post-FX, build config).” They go on to explain that “You must find the game files yourself. This game was never released publicly.” So, that’s a challenge you’ll have to work through on your own. If and when you get the Xbox 360 version of the game recompiled for PC, though, you should expect the following thrilling benefits: - Runs natively on Windows — no emulator, no BIOS. - Controller support. - Online multiplayer — host or join matches over the internet (LAN, Hamachi, playit.gg, or a public server). - In-game pause/settings menu (ESC): video, resolution, frame limit, fullscreen, online setup. - Post-FX filters (brightness, contrast, saturation, vignette, presets…). - Smooth, stable 60 FPS (recompiled, with GPU-pacing fixes for the original's frame timing). Instructions are provided for building the Windows version of the game from its collected sources, plus the Goldeneye Recomp v1.0 code. Coincidentally, this Recomp release comes as the latest James Bond title, 007 First Light game, rides high in the charts on PCs and current-gen consoles. First Light is also the centerpiece of the latest Nvidia GeForce bundling promotion. PC gamers can grab a free copy of the action-adventure game 007 First Light when they purchase a qualifying GeForce RTX 50-series graphics card, gaming desktop, or laptop. Follow Tom's Hardware on Google News, or add us as a preferred source, to get our latest news, analysis, & reviews in your feeds. Get Tom's Hardware's best news and in-depth reviews, straight to your inbox. Mark Tyson is a news editor at Tom's Hardware. He enjoys covering the full breadth of PC tech; from business and semiconductor design to products approaching the edge of reason. - thesyndrome Reply“You must find the game files yourself. This game was never released publicly.” "you must find the game files yourself"...from an unreleased port? I'm familiar with projects that verge on the line of piracy to tell clients that they need to get certain critical files themselves, but usually they ask you to get things that were once available to public, and not a leak of an internal build of a game that never made it to launch. Am I the only one who thinks this is really weird? It's like saying you discovered how to make infinite energy and will release it for everyone, then to turn around and go "oh and you need to do all the formulas yourself or what I release won't work. GOOD LUCK!" - hotaru251 Reply its not weird.thesyndrome said:"you must find the game files yourself"...from an unreleased port? I'm familiar with projects that verge on the line of piracy to tell clients that they need to get certain critical files themselves, but usually they ask you to get things that were once available to public, and not a leak of an internal build of a game that never made it to launch. Am I the only one who thinks this is really weird? It's like saying you discovered how to make infinite energy and will release it for everyone, then to turn around and go "oh and you need to do all the formulas yourself or what I release won't work. GOOD LUCK!" they know people will do it w/o owning it and is exactly why they worded it the way they did. As you said it is in the grey area of piracy. (which cant go into becasue TH mods like to bonk people for discussing it even to get points across) - alrighty_then I remember GoldenEye back in the day, a GREAT game. Later Perfect Dark was better in many ways and was probably the most overdeveloped game ever as the number of game modes even included taking control of random enemies to try to stop a friend playing the normal single player game. Way ahead of its time.Reply - marbleofdoom There are a couple of threads on Reddit talking about his release. Apparently this is just a vibe coded wrapper for Xenia, "claude" is the second contributor on in the repo. Several redditors have already tried it and are claiming it runs worse than just emulating the x360 game.Reply
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