This paper examines the niche but persistent modding community surrounding Dragon Ball Z: Budokai Tenkaichi Tag Team (2010) for the PlayStation Portable (PSP) and its subsequent emulation and modification via the PPSSPP emulator. While commercially considered a late-cycle, handheld port of the console Tenkaichi series, the game has experienced a substantial digital afterlife through fan-led modifications. This study analyzes the technical affordances of PPSSPP (texture replacement, code patching, performance scaling) that enable modding, the typology of popular mods (cosmetic, roster-expansion, gameplay tweaks), and the legal and preservationist implications of this practice. We argue that Tag Team modding represents a form of "emergent authorship," where players transcend consumption to become curators and creators, effectively challenging the planned obsolescence of licensed digital media.
The Emulated Arena: A Study of Dragon Ball Z: Budokai Tenkaichi Tag Team Modding within the PPSSPP Environment dragon ball z budokai tenkaichi tag team mod ppsspp
[Your Name] Course: [e.g., Digital Game Cultures, CSC 495] Date: [Current Date] This paper examines the niche but persistent modding
For game studies, Tag Team modding challenges the notion of a "finished" game. For legal scholars, it highlights the failure of copyright frameworks to address abandoned, licensed IPs. For players, it offers a glimpse of what a portable Budokai Tenkaichi could have been. As Bandai Namco finally develops a new Tenkaichi title (2023’s Sparking! Zero ), the Tag Team modding community stands as a testament to the enduring, grassroots desire for fan-driven game development. We argue that Tag Team modding represents a