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egormakarov | 3 years ago

no, that wasnt the point. I'm not even sure if your typical _western reader_ could distinguish russian from ukrainian looking at the screenshot

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DonHopkins|3 years ago

What's weird about those screen shots is that they must have been photoshopped, because all the graphics except for the text are identical to the English version, yet I highly doubt the lazy translator actually had access to the save files at the exact point in time when the screenshots were made to load them into the Russian version of the game.

So it's much more likely that the screenshots were meticulously edited to remove the English text and replace it with Russian.

English original:

https://archive.ph/GokfI/5fff3abf855b5851484418965bf747d1d8a...

Russian fake:

https://habrastorage.org/getpro/habr/post_images/249/838/546...

English original:

https://archive.ph/GokfI/33461173f8f068f29ae392ddde9833c1000...

Russian fake:

https://habrastorage.org/getpro/habr/post_images/c73/e8f/088...

If you zoom in you can see that the Russian fakes have some but not all of the jpeg artifacts from the English originals smoothed out (look around the letters, then around the lines on the graph), and the large numbers are missing commas, so they are definitely fakes based on the original jpegs of English screen snapshots.

I don't even know if there was a Russian version of SimCity 2000.

There's certainly a Russian version of The Sims 4, but Russia is so existentially terrified of a computer game turning their delicate children gay that they banned it.

https://www.cbr.com/sims-4-wedding-stories-russia-banned-pro...

Edit: I explained above why I am sure they are fakes. Look at the jpeg artifacts closely, which give it away, especially around the letters and lines: some are missing (around all the letters and in some background areas), others are perfectly identical (around the lines of the graph). That proves the Russian versions are fakes beyond a shadow of a doubt, based on the original jpegs of English screen snapshots. Open each of the above four links in consecutive tabs, zoom in on each several steps, and flip back and forth between them to compare them yourself. Some but not all of the background was smoothed (gaussian blur, median filter, unsharp mask, etc), which removed the jpeg artifacts, and the old text was background-cloned away and the new text composed on top of the smooth background, without any jpeg artifacts. They definitely did not make new screen snapshots of the Russian version of the game on the original save files at the exact same time (how would they have even obtained that save file at that exact time?), because then none of the jpeg artifacts would match. It's as terrible a fake screen snapshot forgery as it's a terrible round trip translation from English to Russian back to English.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compression_artifact

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ringing_artifacts

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaussian_blur

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Median_filter

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unsharp_masking

elevader|3 years ago

Why would you assume that these are fakes? There are fan translations for the game (a quick google search would bring this up) and you can download savefiles for Magnasanti. Maybe the person simply recreated the Screenshots with their russian client? Seems a lot easier to me.

Andrew_nenakhov|3 years ago

> There's certainly a Russian version of The Sims 4, but Russia is so existentially terrified of a computer game turning their delicate children gay that they banned it.

Sims 4 is not banned in Russia. It does have a 18+ age restriction, which, I assume, is more or less USA's NC17.