[PSP] Uta no Princesama: Debut [JPN] Minus. Why i can't download it says The site could be temporarily unavailable or too busy.
All Consoles. 3DO. Atari 2600. Atari 5200. Atari 7800.
Atari Jaguar. Atari Lynx. Coleco Colecovision.
Dreamcast. Game Gear. Gameboy / Color. Gameboy Advance.
GameCube. GCE Vectrex. MAME. Mattel Intellivision. Memotech MTX512.
MGT Sam Coupe. MSX1. MSX2. Neo Geo. Neo Geo CD. Neo Geo Pocket. Nintendo.
Nintendo 64. Nintendo DS. PC-Engine. PlayStation. PlayStation 2.
PSP. Sega CD. Sega Genesis. Sega Master System. Sega Saturn.
Super Nintendo. TurboGrafx-16. WonderSwan / Color Search.
I really cant find complete and concrete list with download links of Japanese PSP games that are translated to English, and those games that are in progress and those planing to be translated. You know, all the info on one place.
I think it would be nice for someone to make sticky for that here but in the mean time. I noticed that there are tons of great JPN games for PSP out there in the wild but no one is translated them.i wonder why is that, because some games not just look good but are pretty interesting.for example. I like evangelion jo, ko on. Is there some patch for those games in english? I think that's a good idea to list those to prevent useless topics with the sole goal asking for 'is game X translated I want to play it' and so on. Released, 100% patch: Valkyria Chronicles 3 Special Edition Itadaki Street PSP Danganronpa (only the first, the second will not be) Fushiji no Dungeon (aka Shiren the Wanderer 3) Kingdom Hearts Birth By Sleep Final Mix La Pucelle Ragnarok Monster Hunter Portable 3rd Way of the Samurai Portable Released, Incomplete, 10% menu patches with only some text: Digimon Adventure (based on the anime) (dropped) One Piece Romance Dawn (dropped) Danball Senki Boost (dropped) Little Busters!
CE Blue Roses Queen's Blade (nsfw) Planetarian Toradora! Click to expand. You use a hex editor to find the text.
There's some information on where it begins in the file you'll have to modify if you want longer text, otherwise if you don't change those stick with the exact same number of letters, or more exactly bytes. European language?
Use a tile editor (like tilemolester/crystaltile) to modify the font and add those missing letters. Tile editors will help also with modifying anything other than scrolling messages and dialogue, for example you'll be able to modify the title screen among other things. This guide by is the one that motivated me to begin looking inside roms in the first place It talks about DS/GBA, but the methods really apply for anything. Only difference is the tools to exctract files: instead of Tinke like in the DS games, you'll have to use UMDGen and UMDReplace for the PSP. Otherwise it's the exact same thing. I'm not well placed to say that, but you could also work more on your English especially if you're translating from it.
Friendly advice. Click to expand.99% of the time, you will need to either learn a programming language and program your own tools or find someone that is willing to program them for you. Very, very few games have premade tools available. You can do very minor text editing with a hex editor, provided that the text is not compressed (most games it will be).
The main purpose of using a hex editor is to reverse engineer a file format so that you can program a tool specifically meant to manipulate that format. If you really want to get serious about translating games, your best bet is to learn a programming language such as C# or C (you can use others, but those are the two most common). Click to expand.Well, first pick the language that you want to learn. I personally use C#. Start by learning the basics. If you want to learn C#, there is a series of videos online for free.
I used them when I first started out and I found them to be pretty good. You can find it here: You can also find a ton of tutorials by doing a simple Google search. At first you'll be making small programs that have absolutely nothing to do with game hacking, but the things you learn will be applied to that when you've learned enough.
Click to expand.Pretty sure sufficiently completed patches have already been released for all of these. I can't say they're all exactly at 100% English, but there's pretty much complete save for one or two things. Project Diva Extend is 'nearly 100% translated', but doesn't state much on exactly what's missing. Little Busters has untranslated parts in minigames, but 'the vital parts of the minigames are translated and the minigames aren’t important to the plot anyway, so if you haven’t played LB before, don’t worry, it shouldn’t be a problem.' And in Tantei Opera Milky Holmes, 'Everything except the Quick Time Event videos is translated.'
The other two are at 100%, as far as I know. Pretty sure sufficiently completed patches have already been released for all of these. I can't say they're all exactly at 100% English, but there's pretty much complete save for one or two things.
Uta No Prince-sama Psp Game English Patch
Project Diva Extend is 'nearly 100% translated', but doesn't state much on exactly what's missing. Little Busters has untranslated parts in minigames, but 'the vital parts of the minigames are translated and the minigames aren’t important to the plot anyway, so if you haven’t played LB before, don’t worry, it shouldn’t be a problem.'
Uta Prince No Sama
And in Tantei Opera Milky Holmes, 'Everything except the Quick Time Event videos is translated.' The other two are at 100%, as far as I know. Well, first pick the language that you want to learn. I personally use C#.
Uta No Prince Sama Psp Iso English Patch
Start by learning the basics. If you want to learn C#, there is a series of videos online for free. I used them when I first started out and I found them to be pretty good. You can find it here: You can also find a ton of tutorials by doing a simple Google search. At first you'll be making small programs that have absolutely nothing to do with game hacking, but the things you learn will be applied to that when you've learned enough.