def save_patches(data): with open(PATCHES_PATH, 'w') as file: yaml.dump(data, file, default_flow_style=False, allow_unicode=True) print("Patches saved successfully.") The script needs to scan the YAML and display which cheats are "active." Since RPCS3 doesn't have an "enabled" flag natively, we must create a convention. We will use a # Enabled comment next to the cheat block. A robust parser would look for the cheat's presence in a separate "active" list, but for simplicity, we will use a secondary JSON index.
def main(): if len(sys.argv) < 2: print("Usage:") print(" python rpcs3_cheat_manager.py list <TitleID>") print(" python rpcs3_cheat_manager.py enable <TitleID> <CheatName>") print(" python rpcs3_cheat_manager.py disable <TitleID> <CheatName>") return command = sys.argv[1] rpcs3 cheat manager script
# Update the active index if title_id not in index: index[title_id] = [] def main(): if len(sys
Now go forth—enable that infinite ammo, unlock those hidden costumes, and bend the PS3's reality to your will. Happy modding. Author’s Note: This script is for educational purposes. Always back up your patches.yml before running any automated cheat manager. Always back up your patches
if command == "list": title_id = sys.argv[2] data = load_patches() if title_id in data: cheats = list(data[title_id].keys()) index = load_index() for cheat in cheats: status = "[X]" if cheat in index.get(title_id, []) else "[ ]" print(f"{status} {cheat}") else: print("No cheats found.")
While RPCS3 supports patches via YAML files, managing them manually across hundreds of games is a nightmare. This is where a comes in.
if cheat_name not in data[title_id]: print(f"Cheat '{cheat_name}' not found for {title_id}") print(f"Available: {list(data[title_id].keys())}") return