I usually corrupt aload of offsets,. then look if something changed,... its very doggie,. some are language related,. so you won't see them when changed,..
i hope to receive a PSP-Go next week,.
CTFtoolgui4.6,. Patpat prob could make this,. ;)
by the way,. wish this wasn't a prx but a rco,. hehe seems to do all a rco can do,.. mebbe more,. ok,.
Take out the image : take the unscrambled prx and go to offset :
2bc60 «-- start of the image 2c6b0 «-- end of the image and start of the new one
Once you have the first image selected COPY it and create new file.
Then paste the selection inside and SAVE it as xxxxxx.GIM.
Use RCOEditor with random RCO (only for test) and replace image
with the new file you created and this way you can identificate what's
the image.
The first one is ARROW UP (i hope so) but some image may exist before...
And continue so on , once you do one or two its easy to do them all.
P.S i know why they used PRX , imagine an RCO 1,87 mb ... for now i saw like 50 images inside and i don't know
if replacing them with not similar size and type image would work , but i can be wrong.
They are really much shadows and focus included , plus all the languages ...
And next goal to achieve is to extract the XML file , i m really sure i saw it.
“Fear not for the future, weep not for the past.”
(This post was last modified: 13/02/2011 10:20 AM by gsmoke.)
hmm.. circle clocks look better than square one's... lol
@gsmoke thanks for the info on how to find the images. Another way to extract the image is by just saving the selection with a .gim extension, that way IMO is faster than opening up a new window and pasting the code in it. Also if you have Ctftool installed you can view gim images natively in windows, no need to use rcoedit.
by the way.. An image in there indicate the possibility of a digital clock instead of analog! Some offset probably changes it!?
(This post was last modified: 13/02/2011 03:43 PM by Dmise.)