He launched the app. The screen went black. Then, a miracle: the white, legal "Nintendo" splash screen, rendered in grainy, pixelated glory on the N95’s 2.6-inch QVGA display.
The third reply, from a user named 'Peparoni' himself—an account that hadn't logged in since 2007:
It was the best handheld gaming experience of his entire life. Nintendo Ds Emulator For Symbian S60v3 Peparonity
He had done it. He wasn't playing Phantom Hourglass on a DS. He wasn't even playing it well. He was enduring it. And that was the point.
Then it happened. A blue screen. Not a Windows crash. A Symbian crash. The phone vibrated once, violently, and died. He launched the app
He selected The Legend of Zelda: Phantom Hourglass . A game designed entirely around a stylus and a microphone. He was about to play it using a numeric keypad and a monaural speaker.
"Can you share the .sisx? Link is dead." The third reply, from a user named 'Peparoni'
Kaelan stared at the loading bar on his Nokia N95’s screen. It was 2:47 AM. His thumbs, raw from three hours of frantic forum scrolling, hovered over the keypad. The file was called NDS_S60v3_Peparonity_Final.sisx .