Trainers released before Aurora was made are still the old standalone trainers. This is for people that want them moved into the Aurora interface.
so it's like I imagined which I guess explains the lofty RC cost involved.
being that it's so expensive, and we're basically asking that you update the code on a potentially ancient application, does this RC Reward come with any limitations? if there's an update that is impossible to perform I suppose we're just out of luck. there might be nothing you can do if a game/service is too old or outdated?
Trainers released before Aurora was made are still the old standalone trainers. This is for people that want them moved into the Aurora interface.
so it's like I imagined which I guess explains the lofty RC cost involved.
being that it's so expensive, and we're basically asking that you update the code on a potentially ancient application, does this RC Reward come with any limitations? if there's an update that is impossible to perform I suppose we're just out of luck. there might be nothing you can do if a game/service is too old or outdated?
when a trainer moves to Aurora it's a complete redo and we have to recode the entire trainer thus given trainer's options and game's complexity this costs us lots of time so gives the mentioned circumstances I think the price is pretty fair.