XLink Kai

XLink Kai

XLink Banner With Current Logo
Developer(s) Team XLink
Stable release 7.4.29 / January 31, 2016
Operating system Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, Raspberry Pi
Website Official website

XLink Kai is a method developed by Team-XLink for online play of certain System Link compatible video games. It enables players on the Nintendo GameCube, PlayStation 2, PlayStation 3, PlayStation Portable, Xbox and Xbox 360 to play games across the Internet using a network configuration that simulates a local area network (LAN). It notably also allows original Xbox games to be played online again following the Xbox Live shutdown on April 21, 2010 (similar to that of Save Nintendo Wi-Fi for the Wii).

Summary

XLink Kai is tunneling software which acts as a LAN (it 'tricks' the servers into believing it is a LAN) to connect users from all over the world, creating a free online gaming network. For XLink Kai to work, the Kai client program must be installed and running on a compatible Microsoft Windows, Mac OS X, or Linux device.

For modified ("modded") Xbox consoles, much of the functionality can be provided directly within the Xbox Media Center (XBMC for Xbox) GUI. The Kai client is still required to be running on a computer on the user's network, but players can control connections directly through the console. It is also possible to run the Kai client on other Linux-based devices, such as wireless routers or NAS devices running third party firmware replacements such as DD-WRT or SlugOS.

Usage

Users log onto XLink's servers using a XTag username, similar to a "Gamertag" for Xbox Live. XLink has "Arenas" for each compatible System Link game, with more popular games such as Halo 2 having sub-arenas based on regions within them as an attempt to minimize lag. Players in these arenas will be automatically synced to each other, simulating a LAN connection and thus able to play games normally using System Link functions. In addition to Game Arenas, Kai has a general chat room and a Quarantine Arena in which moderators can isolate abusive players. XLink also lets players create their own self-moderated Private Arenas.

Features

Xlink Kai supports Nintendo GameCube,[1] PlayStation 2,[1] PlayStation 3, PlayStation Portable,[2][3] Xbox[1][4] and Xbox 360 LAN enabled games. It features integrated chat lobbies in which players can meet and converse prior to starting a game session. Clan, tournament and ladder lobbies are also integrated for some games. A list of compatible games can be found on the Team-XLink website. Special considerations have been made for the Xbox 360, which is designed by Microsoft to be incompatible with this kind of software. The console will automatically drop connections if the ping is > 30 milliseconds in a system link connection. However a patch has been released to bypass this limit on modified consoles.[5] At one point support for the Nintendo DS was planned, but was never completed.[6]

XBMC for Microsoft's Xbox console has a control client for XLink Kai that allows control of the XLink Kai software program from the user's Xbox via XBMC GUI. MC360 is a skin for XBMC by Blackbolt that gives the XLink Kai client (XBMC-Live) a familiar interface resembling the Xbox 360's factory dashboard and Xbox Live's connectivity for friends, arenas, etc. XLink Kai was removed from XBMC builds 14099 and later.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 Ransom, James (2004-11-30). "XLink Kai: free online gaming for the masses". Joystiq. Retrieved 2014-05-27.
  2. Archived May 28, 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  3. Yoon, Andrew (2007-03-21). "Xlink Kai turns Ad-Hoc into Infrastructure". Joystiq. Retrieved 2014-05-27.
  4. "New Tunneling Application XLink Kai". Archived from the original on December 17, 2004. Retrieved May 27, 2014.
  5. "Hackers remove the Xbox 360's 30ms ping limit for System Link". N4G. Retrieved 2014-05-27.
  6. GameZone (2004-10-03). "Xlink Kai May Support DS". GameZone. Retrieved 2014-05-27.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, February 01, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.