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How Pokemon GBA Distribution Cartridges Are Replicated and Sold For €1000’s

Discussion in 'Pokemon GBA Event Distributions' started by InsaneNutter, Jun 27, 2019.

  1. InsaneNutter

    InsaneNutter Resident Nutter Staff Member

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    pokemon-gba-distribution-replicate-fake.jpg

    For several years now Pokemon distributions for the Gen 3 GameBoy Advance games have been turning up on sites like Ebay.

    With that in mind you might think it’s controversial I have recently shared how these official GBA development flash carts these are been sold on can easily be re-flashed: Flash / Write Official GBA Development Flash Carts With An Nintendo DS

    This means GBA prototypes and Pokemon Distributions can now easily be duplicated, with replicas sold on as the real thing for significant amounts of money on Ebay.

    The Problem:

    Although not talked about, the sad reality of the situation is method of re flashing GBA devcarts has been exploited in certain circles to keep selling clones of rare Pokémon event distributions for many €1000’s on Ebay, passing them off as originals.

    Myself and others in the Pokemon community have long since suspected this was been done, however no conclusive proof has ever been obtained on how this was been done. Even asking on communities such as Assmebler Games which deal with obscure development hardware revealed little to suggest it was easy to clone these distributions, or the official GBA development hardware was readily available to purchase.

    With that in mind people have been happy to purchase these distribution replicas, sometimes for as much as €2000 on Ebay, believing their genuine and were used at past Nintendo events.

    When certain Pokemon distributions have been dumped it been possible to see remnants of what was previously flashed to the card, as these Official GBA Development Flash Carts are much larger than the actual Pokemon event distribution software.

    In one such example we can see Mortal Kombat Advance had simply been overwrote on this particular cart.

    This was always suspicious as we very much doubted Game Freak has been using second hand development cartridges obtained from Midway Games, although not impossible.

    What is somewhat ironic is myself and others had basically worked out how GBA devcarts were been re flashed a long time ago, it was just never possible to test the theory.

    For anyone who's not read my previous post it's possible to Flash / Write Official GBA Development Flash Carts With An Nintendo DS using the FAS1 homebrew application.



    I’d personally been using FAS1 to flash my old Flash2Advance flashcard for years, using an Nintendo DS Lite. I knew later versions of FAS1 were supposed to have support for GBA development flashcards, although at the time I had no compiled binaries of newer versions of FAS1 or even a GBA development flashcard to test this theory with.

    That all changed earlier this year when a compiled version of FAS1 was was obtained and two different GBA development carts were purchased for testing.

    official-gba-development-carts-rev2-rev-3.jpg

    Needless to say re flashing a official GBA development flash cart now took less time than it did to make a good cuppa tea.

    Genuine Pokemon Generation 3 Distributions:

    Now you might be thinking real distributions must have been on the market at some point for the distributions out there today to be dumped. You’d be correct, some of these sold in 2012 on Nintendo Age, these were of course sealed in a GBA.

    To assist you with potentially identifying these in the future here are images of original GBA Pokemon Gen 3 distributions that we know of, sealed in their respective units:

    10 ANNIV:

    10ANNIV-pokemon-distribution-hardware-1.jpg 10ANNIV-pokemon-distribution-hardware-2.jpg 10ANNIV-pokemon-distribution-hardware-3.jpg 10ANNIV-pokemon-distribution-hardware-4.jpg 10ANNIV-pokemon-distribution-hardware-5.jpg

    Aura Mew:

    aura-mew-pokemon-distribution-hardware-1.jpg aura-mew-pokemon-distribution-hardware-2.jpg

    BFG Shiny Zigzagoon:

    bfg-shiny-zigzagoon-distribution-hardware-1.jpg bfg-shiny-zigzagoon-distribution-hardware-2.jpg bfg-shiny-zigzagoon-distribution-hardware-3.jpg

    US Aurora Ticket:

    us-aurora-ticket-distribution-hardware-1.jpg us-aurora-ticket-distribution-hardware-2.jpg us-aurora-ticket-distribution-hardware-3.jpg

    EU Eon Ticket: (Probably dumped, however not dumped / released that I know of)

    eu-eon-ticket-distribution-hardware-1.jpg eu-eon-ticket-distribution-hardware-2.jpg eu-eon-ticket-distribution-hardware-3.jpg eu-eon-ticket-distribution-hardware-4.jpg


    Where is the conclusive proof?

    You'd be right in thinking I've made a lot of claims and not posted much proof, I honestly don't have any interest in all the drama that comes with that. If you wan't to believe me thats great, if not that's cool, I'd sooner people just know how easy it is to clone Gen 3 Pokemon distributions that are on development hardware and have as much information as possible to enable them to make an informed purchasing decision in the future.

    Myself and various people in the Pokemon event community have seen said proof of such activities earlier in the year, so its out there and if you ask around i'm sure you will also find it.

    Ebay Links:

    Old links to some auctions that seem to still be in Ebay's archives.

    Pokemon Aurora Ticket (Deoxys) Distribution GBA Cartridge NFR Not For Resale

    Pokemon Aurora Ticket Distribution GBA NFR Not For Resale Cartridge Rare Deoxys

    10ANNIV Pokemon Day 2006 - Another 10ANNIV cart that sold after the public release of this distribution.

    Conclusion:

    I think I've shared enough information on how its been done to bring widespread awareness to the practice, which will hopefully make people think twice before spending a lot of money on a distribution which has already been dumped and released just to "own something original".

    In the event something genuine does surface you have a good idea of what it might look like from the above images, certainly i'd be a lot more inclined to believe its an original if it was sealed in a GBA.

    So at least now the information is out there people can make an informed decision before purchasing a Pokemon Distribution in the future. If it’s a standalone devcart please think twice before purchasing it, hopefully meaning theirs less chance of a replica getting passed off as the genuine thing on Ebay.

    Approximately 5 or less sealed units of each GBA event should theoretically exist, other than clearly not accounting for as many that have been sold over the years, no one with the original unit in their right mind would destroy the seal to dump the rom when there are ways to do it via the link port if they did some research.

    In addition anyone wants to develop homebrew for the GBA and has an official GBA development card can now make use of it and easily write their own homebrew to it, just as developers did all those years ago.

    Credits:

    @Deoxyz and @YoshiMoshi significantly contributed with a lot of the information / research in this post.
     
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  2. RJRacoon

    RJRacoon Member

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    Thanks a lot for this well written Post, InsaneNutter. Since a couple of months I strongly suspected that some of the distribution cards (that seemed to flood ebay for a while) were replicas in some sort.

    You can get those development cartridges relatively easy and cheap on their own comparing to a Gen 3 distribution cartridge, which does sell for a significant amount more. Kind of thought that it would be more complicated flashing a development card.

    I played with the thought of getting my hands on the 10ANNIV cart for example, since that event connected to me the most when I attended it in 2006.
    Alone in the last year atleast 3 different ones popped up on ebay, from which only the last one was sold with its respective system attached. This eally made me think and opened my eyes, and one cannot ignore how easy it is to counterfeit those.

    Again, thanks for sharing this.
     
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  3. Deoxyz

    Deoxyz Retired Preservationist

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    I am very relieved that this information is finally going public. In late 2018 and early 2019, myself, YoshiMoshi, and a couple others unnamed decided to put in full effort to dig up the proof of what ourselves and community had suspected for years in regards to the GBA distribution carts being sold on eBay. YoshiMoshi and I took upon the task of rewriting a devcart, and the two unnamed dug into the actual sales market. Well after a ton of work being more lengthy than I can even remember to detail, so much information had been compiled to prove every aspect of this dirty and manipulative market that we suspected was being monopolized by individual( s ) since approximately 2014. Basically if you were one of the elite few private collectors or hoarders with access to an ultra rare rom, and happened to either have fully working rare official dev hardware AND software, or with a lot of digging found an obscure compiled custom fork of FAS1 (un-compiled source code was very old and required proper knowledge to modify and update in order to compile yourself), all you'd have to do is buy a cheap GBA devcart for approx $100-$400, then sell it anywhere between $1000-$3000 for mass profit.

    I don't really need to go into what I've been telling people one-on-one about this, InsaneNutter's post is pretty much a mirror of that. Key things I will reiterate which you should keep in mind: One, approximately 5 or less devices per event should exist, as before Gen IV distribution carts were not mass produced for nationwide events, rather held at select few cities around the world. The vast amount of 10ANNIV and Aurora Ticket cartridges that have sold over the years certainly does not account for this very simple fact. Two, the carts used at the events were sealed into a GBA/GBA SP via a screwed on metal brace and secured with official Nintendo non-tamper tape. No one in their right mind would physically damage the device and its physical value in order to dump the rom, when with a bit of research during that time period it can teach you how to dump the rom via the link port. Even with the possibility of a fool decision by an owner, it still certainly does not to account for all the loose carts being sold. How many sealed units have you ever seen for sale? Most likely none. How many pictures have you seen of a particular event's device that was not from the same photo session? Most likely one set. How many loose carts have you seen for sale? Many if you've kept an eye on this stuff for a long time. The nature of this market speaks for itself when you consider all the facts. Do not buy loose GBA distribution carts if your goal it to obtain something original or a piece of history. If you are a physical collector, suffice with finding a cheap devcart to rewrite, you'll save a ton of money and the insult of being scammed. I hate to say it's a lost cause if you want an original sealed unit, but all I can say is I wish you a ton of luck, they never pop up for sale and I think all have settled with permanent owners for many years now. They all appeared originally on NintendoAge around 2012, supposedly after the Nintendo HQ in Germany had its physical properties liquidated. All were seemingly sold and I think most never showed up for sale again, other than maybe an occasional private deal behind the scenes.

    With my retirement in March, I left an infodump containing the devcart writing details and some rather controversial market information with the preservation team and told them to make it public sometime in 2019 when they were ready. I figured the last thing I could do to benefit the community before calling quits is doing what was necessary to finally get the filthy sales market to start imploding, and to help people from being scammed, all by providing the knowledge we had obtained. With time and more public exposure that would surely happen. Look what happened with Mystery Mew FireRed cart sales since the savefiles were finally publicized in early 2016. Very few pop up for sale anymore, and when they do they do not sell quickly and sit for a long time, until the listing is either pulled or an uneducated person comes along, and usually not sold at high prices. Initially these types of things being public allows scammers to jump on a train and make some money for a small window of time, but with that they could also flood the market and raise suspicion to the cautious buyer who will then do research. With time and more and more public exposure, these dirty markets will eventually be destroyed. You can't always cry about not doing something like this because of the potential negative risks, someone HAS to take the first step towards balancing the scales. Like InsaneNutter said, at this point the damage has already been done over the last 6 or so years, keeping this information private only benefits the scammers to keep doing what they've been doing.

    Certain aspects of the information obtained related to the sales market I had also initially hoped to be public, but it is indeed controversial as it would be severely and directly attacking a particular individual who has indulged in these activities. As InsaneNutter said we're not about causing drama, only providing knowledge. As InsaneNutter also said, the diligent person can find this information if they really want to, as it is in private circulation. Despite the knowledge it would provide, it would be rather inappropriate and unprofessional for us to post that stuff on the forums. Myself personally, I do not want to be responsible for putting anyone under direct public attack, regardless of circumstances. They may not have a conscience but I do. What is absolutely necessary to know has been made public with this thread.

    The photos InsaneNutter provided above are mostly new to the public, we found those as well. As noted earlier, very few sets of photos exist of these devices. I wanted to leave off this post by pointing out the European Eon Ticket. This was something I initially wanted to maybe try tracking down in 2019, but the flame of interest for Pokemon and video games at that point was fully gone for me. Suffice to say no one has found it yet, I'm not even sure if any effort had been put into it because the loose leads toward it were ancient and unlikely to yield results. However this proves it does indeed exist with a private collector, so the rom is more than likely dumped and out there. Do not give up hope for preserving more distribution software in the future. With Christmas next week, the final distribution project I worked on from 2018 will finally culminate over a year later with it's publicity on the 25th. This stuff is out there, and when we think we've hit the end, things always pop up again and again. A recent example being the Gen 2 and 3 PCNY softwares. I recently even heard a rumor about another GBA rom that may be out there. It's also wise to keep an occasional eye on auction sites like Mercari Japan and Yahoo Japan, where YoshiMoshi found the first publicly known Japanese distribution cart in 2018. I'd like to think that public preservation of Pokemon rarities will continue for many years to come, it's essential to the future of the fanbase for decades to come. That's true whether you realize it or not, and one day in the distant future this data will be too long past for anything new to have a chance of showing up, despite what the lack of existing publicly is robbing of the fans that will, and already have, come and gone.
     
    Last edited: Dec 29, 2019
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  4. RJRacoon

    RJRacoon Member

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    Recently I got my Hands on another 10ANNIV device, presumably used at an english speaking event back in 2006. Cant say where it was used (Britain, Netherlands or at the Scandinavian distribution) or if is was used as a backup system (?, since its not pokemon themed like the other known 10ANNIV). As to my knowledge this is the 3rd English 10ANNIV System known to exist, the other being the red Groudon one and a yellow Pikachu version GBA-SP.
    As InsaneNutter suggested, I want to share pictures of the system and where it was found, since we strongly believe it to be authentic. In case the original owner of the System who sold it to me doesnt want it to be public I'll respect that and edit my post in that way the origins doesnt get mentioned (dont want to bring anyone in trouble).
    The original owner bought a couple of rare nintendo items and some boxes with random stuff off a company, which supported nintendo back in the day before they did the distributions completely on their own. In one of the boxes, together with cables for other regular nintendo systems he found this 10ANNIV system, with an empty battery and unfortunatly damaged, but still functional.
     

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  5. InsaneNutter

    InsaneNutter Resident Nutter Staff Member

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    Now you have said a "company, which supported nintendo back in the day before they did the distributions completely on their own" the origins of this could well be Bergsala.

    We know Bergsala supported Nintendo with Gen 3 distributions, as per Bulbapedia: "In Denmark, they were given away to players who mailed their game cartridges to Bergsala A/S, Selsmosevej 2, 1.sal, opgang vest, 2630 Taastrup from August 28 to December 31, 2006." Certainly they would also be less incentive to brand something the public would probably never see.
     
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  6. JonasBlue

    JonasBlue New Member

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    As far as i know, 10ANNIV Distribution was also used in Grecce, Sweden and Finland back in 2006.
     
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  7. Gridelin

    Gridelin Well-Known Member

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    Awesome purchase! If you have a Wii with Homebrew and a Gamecube Link Cable, would you be open to using https://github.com/FIX94/gba-link-cable-dumper and comparing the ROM of your device with the ROM on digiex? You obviously wouldn't have to release the ROM or anything if that is a concern, but it would be nice to know if there are any differences between the ROM of this device with the ROM publicly available.
     
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  8. RJRacoon

    RJRacoon Member

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    Thats a great point @InsaneNutter, could as well be that. I mean, maybe trying to find a pattern here may be stupid, but that would make sense. Intresting how they find their way through multiple countries. This 10ANNIV system was found in a box in one of the german speaking countries (dont want to name the specific country) by the former owner/finder.

    Are you sure about that? According to bulbapedia the events took place in the U.K, France, Italy, Spain, the Netherlands and to some extend Denmark/Sweden/Norway, where the players could sent in their cartridge to get the pokemon loaded in. Norway was the exception, and they distributed it on the championships 2006 and even 2008 (lul). I mean, if it isnt listed on bulbapedia doesnt necessarily mean that it never existed, of course. Atleast from Finland and Greece I dont know if they participated.

    Thanks man! In fact, I am dumping it at the moment, took me some trial and error because the newest version of the dumper 1.6 always gave me an error, so I had to go to 1.5. Since I am not good with hex code at all, or to compare it, you want me to send it to you or InsaneNutter or anyone else of the research team?

    Edit: From my very limited knowledge of Hexadecimal, I compared them with a program, most is the same except for some lines and a lot of FF filler data on my end. Does the ROM which we have here public have here has some sort of fillerdata removed (since mine has a different filesize as well)?
     
    Last edited: May 11, 2020
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  9. Gridelin

    Gridelin Well-Known Member

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    Feel free to PM it to me, and I can send it along to anyone else that would have interest in looking at it :). The ROM size can vary if I remember correctly, the link dumper tools don't have the best time in the world correctly detecting the size of development cartridges.
     
  10. InsaneNutter

    InsaneNutter Resident Nutter Staff Member

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    The 10ANNIV we have was trimmed to 32 mbit as anything else on the development cartridge after that was data left over from what had been flashed to it previously. You could trim your dump to 32 mbit with GBATA and it should pretty much match what we have here.
     
  11. JonasBlue

    JonasBlue New Member

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    Here some improve
    Greece:
    https://web.archive.org/web/20071019160109/http://www.nintendo.gr/news/showmediano.asp?arid=730

    Finland:
    https://web.archive.org/web/20061118100155/http://www.nintendo.fi/?file=368
     
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  12. RJRacoon

    RJRacoon Member

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    Ooh very intresting, maybe the bulbapedia site shuold be edited with that information! Thank you very much for sharing @JonasBlue ,much appreciated. Whats intresting is that if you look closely you can even see another distribution device on the finnish report.
     

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  13. Omar Elsayed

    Omar Elsayed New Member

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    Do you know if there's any homebrew that can rewrite repro gba carts?
     
    Last edited by a moderator: Apr 17, 2021

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