Burnout Legends: Custom Soundtracks??

Javery

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Can I set up my PSP to play mp3s off of the memory card instead of the in-game music? If not, can I do this with any PSP game? Is it even possible?
 
[quote name='praystation']If you are using the ISO then yes. You can unpack and repack the iso with your own custom soundtracks.[/QUOTE]

This game can run off the memory stick? Do you need a 2GB one to get it to work?
 
[quote name='javeryh']This game can run off the memory stick? Do you need a 2GB one to get it to work?[/QUOTE]
No. A 512 is more than enough. But piracy is bad.
 
well if you own the game and decide to run it off a memory stick with custom soundtrack there shouldnt be any problem.
 
[quote name='62t']well if you own the game and decide to run it off a memory stick with custom soundtrack there shouldnt be any problem.[/QUOTE]

That's still illegal.
 
[quote name='rabidmonkeys']Why would that be illegal?[/QUOTE]

The fact that you are not playing the game on its original medium is bad. You had to d/l or rip it yourself, which would be part of the whole illegalness of it all.
 
[quote name='rabidmonkeys']Why would that be illegal?[/QUOTE]

It's a violation of copyright. Without looking at it, I'm pretty sure you would be in violation of the end-user license agreement that comes with the game which would give you the right to play Burnout on the PSP using the UMD only. You most certainly would not have the right to make a copy of the disc. Some people will start screaming about fair use but it most likely doesn't apply in this situation because you would be ripping the UMD for personal use (and fair use is usually reserved as a defense to copyright violation for educational or newsworthy uses).
 
I BOUGHT the game, i OWN the game, I OWN the COPY. and I DO WHATEVER I WANT with it (including deleting the update folder, so I dont have to update, dump it using fastloader, unpack the iso, delette the soundtracks, upload my Jpop songs, repack the iso, and launch it from my MS using Devkit 0.21).
 
[quote name='praystation']I BOUGHT the game, i OWN the game, I OWN the COPY. and I DO WHATEVER I WANT with it (including deleting the update folder, so I dont have to update, dump it using fastloader, unpack the iso, delette the soundtracks, upload my Jpop songs, repack the iso, and launch it from my MS using Devkit 0.21).[/QUOTE]

Well, of course you can do whatever you want - you do have free will - but it's still illegal.
 
[quote name='javeryh']Well, of course you can do whatever you want - you do have free will - but it's still illegal.[/QUOTE]

Wow you really are a lawyer.
 
[quote name='javeryh']Well, of course you can do whatever you want - you do have free will - but it's still illegal.[/QUOTE]


I don't know about that. Unless there was an addition to the DMCA that prohibits making backup copies of UMDs. You can legally do it with the PS2, I don't see why you couldn't do it with the PSP. (And making backup copies of games on any disc-based format is allowed under the DMCA, last I checked. The reason Sony went after HDLoader is because people were renting the games and illegally copying them)

Remember kids: when you sell the original, the copy must be included.
 
Regardless of what the EULA says about playing the game in a medium other than what it was intended, its still illegal. The reason its illegal is that at some point your going to have to circumvent copyright encoding to open the disc. That, plain and simple, is still illegal. The odd part is, its LEGAL to own a backup of electronic media like DVDs and games, but its ILLEGAL to break to encoding to make said backup. Its a wierd little quirk right now.
 
[quote name='RedvsBlue']Regardless of what the EULA says about playing the game in a medium other than what it was intended, its still illegal. The reason its illegal is that at some point your going to have to circumvent copyright encoding to open the disc. That, plain and simple, is still illegal. The odd part is, its LEGAL to own a backup of electronic media like DVDs and games, but its ILLEGAL to break to encoding to make said backup. Its a wierd little quirk right now.[/QUOTE]

Right. Even if you are allowed to own an exact copy you are not allowed to make it if it has been copyright protected in any way.
 
[quote name='javeryh']Right. Even if you are allowed to own an exact copy you are not allowed to make it if it has been copyright protected in any way.[/QUOTE]

That's extremely hard to prosecute.
 
[quote name='CocheseUGA']That's extremely hard to prosecute.[/QUOTE]

True. I think copyright holders are more concerned about mass distribution of illegal copies than one person backing up a DVD or UMD to his personal hard drive for personal use. It's when these things inevitably start showing up on P2P or bittorrent sites that they take notice. I mean, technically speaking, if you go into a bar and there is a CD playing over the stereo system, the bar is in violation of copyright because it is an unauthorized "performance" of the copyrighted material (no express permission from the copyright holder). There's a "close circle of friends and family" exception so you can listen to a CD in your home but arguably it's illegal for a business to play one for its patrons. Totally effed up and no one enforces it - our IP laws need a complete overhaul to reflect today's society...
 
[quote name='javeryh']True. I think copyright holders are more concerned about mass distribution of illegal copies than one person backing up a DVD or UMD to his personal hard drive for personal use. It's when these things inevitably start showing up on P2P or bittorrent sites that they take notice. I mean, technically speaking, if you go into a bar and there is a CD playing over the stereo system, the bar is in violation of copyright because it is an unauthorized "performance" of the copyrighted material (no express permission from the copyright holder). There's a "close circle of friends and family" exception so you can listen to a CD in your home but arguably it's illegal for a business to play one for its patrons. Totally effed up and no one enforces it - our IP laws need a complete overhaul to reflect today's society...[/QUOTE]

So true. Even worse for showing sports in sportsbars. Technically, you aren't supposed to play the audio. The system needs an update.
 
This game gets no down time in my PSP. I am playing it more than I play Socom. I went and got Burnout Revenge since this game was so much fun. These are my first Burnout games and I cant believe I have not tried them out b4.
 
[quote name='unctennis122']How do you put in the custom soundtracks into the game?[/QUOTE]

I can't believe you just asked that. You are on page two of this exact discussion.
 
You need this program to change MP3's to TOC. It's called Exact Audio Copy

Extract the Iso then Install the attachment you just downloaded. Open the exe and click on EAC. Choose MP3 to hard drive, Pick a song and click save. It will save in TOC format. The best way to do this is just copy and paste the EA Track names over the TOC song names you just converted. put back in folder music iso folder. Rebuild the ISO with VCDROM.



Enjoying Burnout with your own music.
 
Even if you put your own music in there is there a way to change the tag or is it still going to say "Random Song by Random Punk-Pop Band" on the pop-up menus?
 
[quote name='javeryh']Even if you put your own music in there is there a way to change the tag or is it still going to say "Random Song by Random Punk-Pop Band" on the pop-up menus?[/QUOTE]
It still says "Random Song by Random Punk-Pop Band."
 
[quote name='zewone']It still says "Random Song by Random Punk-Pop Band."[/QUOTE]

Makes sense... oh well. Maybe the next Burnout will have more music options - it seems to make sense to allow for it since the PSP is an mp3 player too...
 
It's so damn strange when my burnout plays cagcast as its background music. (it's like hearing CheapyD saying "Ohayo Gozaimasu" (good morning). Whenever I start a race.
 
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