Battlefield 4 Update 1-reloaded -

| Field | Value | Interpretation | |-------|-------|----------------| | Release Name | Battlefield.4.Update.1-RELOADED | Follows scene naming convention (Game.Patch.Number-Group) | | Date | 2013-11-04 | 5 days after original cracked ISO | | Size | 45x15MB (675 MB unpacked) | Typical split-archive strategy for Usenet/private FTPs | | Protection | Origin + custom EA DRM | Acknowledges the patching of two DRM layers | | Notes | “Copy contents to game folder, run REGFIX” | Indicates manual installation + registry surgery |

At first glance, the 195 MB update (split into 45 RAR volumes) appeared to mirror the official v1.0.0.1 patch. In practice, it contained a hybrid of legitimately updated game binaries, a custom crack, and a registry manipulation tool. The primary documentation for any scene release is the .nfo file (ASCII art information file). The NFO for Update 1 contains key fields: Battlefield 4 Update 1-RELOADED

Author: Digital Preservation Unit Date: April 2026 Subject: Analysis of a scene release binary (nFO metadata, RAR structure, and executable patching) Abstract This paper examines Battlefield 4 Update 1-RELOADED , a pirated software patch released by the warez group RELOADED in late 2013. While ostensibly a minor version increment for DICE’s flagship first-person shooter, this release serves as a crucial artifact for understanding three phenomena: (1) the technical architecture of post-launch game patching, (2) the operational methodologies of contemporary cracking groups, and (3) the role of scene releases in game preservation before the standardization of digital distribution platforms. We analyze the release’s metadata, file structure, and socio-technical context to argue that Update 1 was less a set of gameplay improvements and more a crack propagation tool disguised as a patch. 1. Introduction On October 29, 2013, Electronic Arts released Battlefield 4 . The launch was notoriously unstable, plagued by “netcode” issues, client crashes, and save corruption. Official updates followed rapidly. However, for users who had acquired the game via the Battlefield 4-RELOADED cracked ISO (released October 30, 2013), official patches were incompatible. The group RELOADED thus released Battlefield 4 Update 1-RELOADED on November 4, 2013. The NFO for Update 1 contains key fields: