Sunday, November 6, 2022

Running a pinball game from a disk image doesn't make me a pirate

I like pinball; I have a Williams Star Trek: The Next Generation and a Stern Sopranos machine in my house. (As it happens, the Sopranos machine is consistently more popular with guests as the ST:TNG machine tends to be a drain monster.) But computer pinball games were usually iffy due to substandard physics until around the mid nineties. One of the finest of those early releases are the Pro Pinball games; they easily had the best gameplay and graphics, and despite being synthetic were nevertheless plausible machine designs instead of some of the fanciful crap you get nowadays. They were all ported to the classic Mac and I own the lot. Here are the first and last, Pro Pinball: The Web and Fantastic Journey.
I'm making a point of saying I own these and showing you I do, because none of the Pro Pinball titles will play without the CD mounted. For The Web, which I have here as part of the 10 Tons Of Fun compilation pack released by StarPlay, and Timeshock this makes sense because the music tracks are regular redbook audio and play directly from the CD. But this was not the case for Big Race USA nor my personal favourite Fantastic Journey: near as I could determine, the CD requirement was only to make sure you owned the disc. I could certainly dupe it and play from a burned copy, and that's what I did, but I ought to be able to install the game and not need the disc at all. As always copy protection only inconveniences legal owners and never deters the pirates.

In this case it didn't deter them either, because I became aware of a crack for Big Race USA that will happily play the game from a CD image. My "gaming" classic Mac is a Power Macintosh 7300 with a 800MHz Sonnet G4, an ATI Rage Orion (a Mac-specific 16MB Rage 128GL which has fewer compatibility problems with older games than the Radeons), a gig of RAM and two 18GB SCSI drives. That's more than enough space to save disk images for games and most of the games (that don't require redbook audio tracks) play from one, which is both faster and less wear on the optical drive. Big Race USA and Fantastic Journey both refuse to.

The Web runs a unique executable, but the others use a more or less common runtime. This gave me hope that Fantastic Journey could be broken in the same way that Big Race was. Let's have a look.

Power Mac executables are stored in the data fork in Preferred Executable Format, or PEF (parenthetically 68K apps classically used CODE resources, but CFM-68K apps can be in the data fork too). When we compare the crack and the original executable, they differ in exactly four bytes, or one PowerPC instruction. Here is the disassembly of the original function up to and including the change:

_check_protection:
   mflr    r0
   stw     r31,-4(r1)
   stw     r0,8(r1)
   stwu    r1,-320(r1)
   bl      .-340

Conveniently there are symbols in this build, so it's pretty obvious what this function is called and what it does. The first four instructions are consistent with a PowerPC function prologue; it then calls another function. This second function must be what does the actual CD check, because the crack replaces it with li r3,1. r3 is conventionally where the return value is passed, so we've just stubbed out the call and said that the check passed. That's enough to start the game as it never checks for the presence of the disc again.

Unfortunately the porters got smarter by the time Fantastic Journey was released because there are no symbols in the build anywhere. And because those leading instructions (assuming they're even using the same function in the same way) are very common — mflr would lead almost any non-leaf function — there are just way too many hits in the file to find our target.
But there's another way around it. While riffling through the PEF string table I found both the CD's name (FJOURNEY) and the string .AppleCD. This string is the device driver the executable is looking for, or in other words, it's not enough just to have a volume mounted called FJOURNEY; it must be mounted using that driver to prove it's a disc.
My preference for disk images on the classic Mac is Disk Copy, which directly mount on the desktop. I still had the non-working image of the Fantastic Journey CD, so I mounted it and fired up TattleTech to see what driver the volume was mounted as. It reports it as .HDI.
The string .AppleCD only appears once in the entire file, so if this is our check, then that's where we do it. Note that there is a length byte directly before the string, so we change that to $04 from $08 and overwrite the first four characters with .HDI to change the driver. (This means that this executable will now only work with a disk image copy of Fantastic Journey. Sounds fine to me.)

And with that, the game boots:

Let's get a few rounds in before bed. This principle probably works for other games too: if you only see a single .AppleCD string in the executable, you'll likely have success with a similar in-place patch. Take that, inconvenient copy protection.

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See more of my general vintage computing projects,
mostly microcomputers, 6502, PalmOS, 68K/Power Mac
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Thanks for reading. -- Cameron Kaiser