Banjo-Kazooie N64 has been decompiled, opening the door for PC ports

Authored by videogameschronicle.com and submitted by naaz0412

Banjo-Kazooie is the latest Nintendo 64 game to be decompiled, making PC ports of the game possible.

As spotted by X user BringBackBanjoK, a fan-made decompilation project for the game has now hit 100% completion.

Decompilation involves reverse-engineering the code of indivisual Nintendo 64 games and turning them into C code, which can then be compiled into playable PC versions.

Modders can also use this decompiled codes to add improvements to the game while recompiling them, such as the ability to turn on improved frame rate, ultra-wide support, 4K resolutions and ray tracing.

Should a PC port become available, players will have to provide their own legally-sourced N64 ROM of Banjo-Kazooie to run it – the software takes assets from the ROM (such as character models, audio and textures) and combines them with the decompiled code to create a native PC version.

The belief is that this helps shield the projects somewhat from legal ramifications. Reverse engineering projects such as these are technically made legal because the developers involved do not use any leaked content or copyrighted assets.

In May, a tool called N64: Recompiled was released, which automatically recompiles N64 binaries into C code in a fraction of the time it takes full decompilation projects.

However, its created Nerrel points out that “the automated process isn’t perfect and the recomps usually require manual fixes for things like modern hardware speeds being way faster than expected”, meaning full user-led cecompilations are generally more accurate.

Previous decompilation projects have led to PC ports of The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time and The Legend of Zelda: Majora’s Mask.

TommyHamburger on August 31st, 2024 at 16:38 UTC »

Looking forward to it. I was in the mood to play about a month ago and saw the decompile was at 98% (?) progress with no word on how long that final bit may take. Loaded up an emulator instead and it felt, well, just a little too archaic to play, plus I had a sound issue, so I shelved it.

OriginalLamp on August 31st, 2024 at 12:45 UTC »

Finally

Andalfe on August 31st, 2024 at 11:47 UTC »

These decomp projects (ocarina of time & MM) and fan made games (fallout London) keeping me excited about gaming.

I never played oot as a kid but discovering it now with full camera control has been a real eye opener.