A work-in-progress decompilation of Castlevania Symphony of the Night for Sony PlayStation 1 and Sega Saturn. It aims to recreate the source code from the existing binaries using static and/or dynamic analysis. The code compiles byte-for-byte to the same binaries of the game, effectively being a matching decompilation.
It currently supports the following versions of the game:
*`us` the reference build with the serial number SLUS-00067
*`hd` an unreleases PS1 Japanese build found in Castlevania: Dracula X Chronicles game data
*`saturn` the port created by an external development team
This repo does not include any assets or assembly code necessary for compiling the binaries. A prior copy of the game is required to extract the required assets.
Code coverage means how many bytes of code have been successfully converted from assembly into C code, while decomp function is how many functions have been succesfully decompiled.
Decompiling a game is a mastodontic task. If you have computer science knowledge, please join us in this journey. Any contribution will be very appreciated!
This project is possible thanks to the hard work of tools provided by the Decompilation community:
* [mips2c](https://github.com/matt-kempster/m2c) from @matt-kempster to decompile MIPS assembly into C. This proven to be more accurate than Hexrays IDA and Ghidra.
* [splat](https://github.com/ethteck/splat) from @ethteck to disassemble code and extract data with a symbol map. This tool provides the fundamental of the SOTN decomp.
* [asm-differ](https://github.com/simonlindholm/asm-differ) from @simonlindholm to know how the decompiled code compares to the original binary.
* [decomp-permuter](https://github.com/simonlindholm/decomp-permuter) from @simonlindholm to pick different versions of the same code that better matches the original binary.
* [decomp.me](https://github.com/decompme/decomp.me/) by @ethteck, @nanaian and @mkst to provide a collaborative decompilation site to share and contribute to work-in-progress decompiled functions.
* [frogress](https://github.com/decompals/frogress) by @ethteck to store and retrieve progression data.
* [esa-new](https://github.com/mkst/esa-new) by @mkst as an inspiration on how to set-up a PS1 decompilation project.