The trouble started when Brandon, the school bully, demanded a copy of Street Fighter II Turbo . Leo refused. Brandon shoved him into a locker. The next day, Leo's locker was empty — books, jacket, and most painfully, the game copier, gone.
In the summer of 1995, twelve-year-old Leo discovered a tarnished silver device at a neighborhood garage sale. The man selling it called it a "game copier" — a chunky cartridge that plugged into his Super Nintendo, with slots on top for blank floppy disks. Leo paid five dollars and ran home. game copier
Leo reclaimed his game copier from Brandon’s trash can, dented but working. He never copied another commercial game. Instead, he used it to back up his own pixel art creations — homemade games he’d later share on a local BBS under the handle "CopyKnight." The trouble started when Brandon, the school bully,