Bootlegs of Telefang 1: Difference between revisions

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(Added information about Pokemon Great Collections, a Chinese hack of Telefang Speed. Also fixed link to Waixing. For some reason the php.index in the old link wouldn't let me save the new article.)
(Added information about another hack of Telefang 1, called Digimon Data.)
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* [[Kou Dai Jing Ling - Fei Cui|Telefang (NES)]] - An low quality NES port made by Waixing, a pirate Chinese company who is notorious for making many other bootleg games as well<ref>http://bootleggames.wikia.com/wiki/Waixing</ref>. The music in the pirated NES game is not from Telefang, and the battle system is very different. The Denjuu have Pokémon names, and this pirate even has the first 11 Pokémon from Ruby/Sapphire (though with wrong names).
* [[Kou Dai Jing Ling - Fei Cui|Telefang (NES)]] - An low quality NES port made by Waixing, a pirate Chinese company who is notorious for making many other bootleg games as well<ref>http://bootleggames.wikia.com/wiki/Waixing</ref>. The music in the pirated NES game is not from Telefang, and the battle system is very different. The Denjuu have Pokémon names, and this pirate even has the first 11 Pokémon from Ruby/Sapphire (though with wrong names).
* Pokemon Great Collections (Kou Dai Guai Shou Da Ji He) - A Chinese hack of Telefang Speed. The sprites of the denjuu are all replaced by Pokemon in-game, and the title screen has been edited to feature Pikachu and a different title logo. The Pokemon sprites used appear to have been taken from Pokemon Gold/Silver. <ref>http://s15.zetaboards.com/Tulunk_Village/topic/7025423/1/</ref>
* Pokemon Great Collections (Kou Dai Guai Shou Da Ji He) - A Chinese hack of Telefang Speed. The sprites of the denjuu are all replaced by Pokemon in-game, and the title screen has been edited to feature Pikachu and a different title logo. The Pokemon sprites used appear to have been taken from Pokemon Gold/Silver. <ref>http://s15.zetaboards.com/Tulunk_Village/topic/7025423/1/</ref>
* Digimon Data - A Chinese hack of the first Telefang games, although which version is unknown. Some of the sprites of the denjuu are replaced by Digimon and the remaining denjuu are given garbled names (such as Wrumu). Many of the Digimon are also given random names. It is apparently poorly translated from Chinese to English or Japanese. The game is also poorly hacked, suffering from glitches and crashing after certain events.<ref>http://s15.zetaboards.com/Tulunk_Village/topic/7107855/1/</ref>


==See also==
==See also==

Revision as of 09:58, 13 January 2012

The 2-in-1 Pokémon Diamond and Jade bootleg cartridge.
  • 2-in-1 Pokémon Crystal and Pokémon Diamond[4].
  • 2-in-1 Pokémon Diamond and Pokémon Jade[5].
  • 3-in-1 Pokémon Diamond, Pokémon Jade and Pokémon Crystal[6].
  • Telefang (NES) - An low quality NES port made by Waixing, a pirate Chinese company who is notorious for making many other bootleg games as well[7]. The music in the pirated NES game is not from Telefang, and the battle system is very different. The Denjuu have Pokémon names, and this pirate even has the first 11 Pokémon from Ruby/Sapphire (though with wrong names).
  • Pokemon Great Collections (Kou Dai Guai Shou Da Ji He) - A Chinese hack of Telefang Speed. The sprites of the denjuu are all replaced by Pokemon in-game, and the title screen has been edited to feature Pikachu and a different title logo. The Pokemon sprites used appear to have been taken from Pokemon Gold/Silver. [8]
  • Digimon Data - A Chinese hack of the first Telefang games, although which version is unknown. Some of the sprites of the denjuu are replaced by Digimon and the remaining denjuu are given garbled names (such as Wrumu). Many of the Digimon are also given random names. It is apparently poorly translated from Chinese to English or Japanese. The game is also poorly hacked, suffering from glitches and crashing after certain events.[9]

See also

References