He exited to the LiveArea. Nothing. His heart sank.
ux0:app/PCSB01366/ ├── eboot.bin ├── sce_module/ ├── data.psarc └── (many other files) Alongside it came a reAddcont folder with DLC (the Summer Vibes pack). He copied the folder to ux0: and the reAddcont to ux0: . Then, crucially, he refreshed LiveArea twice – once in VitaShell (Press Triangle → Refresh LiveArea) and once in the NoNpDrm plugin’s database tool.
Then he remembered: On reboot, a new bubble appeared – a tiny car icon with “Horizon Chase Turbo.” He tapped it. Horizon Chase Turbo PS VITA -USA- -NoNpDrm-
The screen went black for three agonizing seconds. Then… the AQUA STYLE logo. Then the roar of an engine. The vibrant title screen loaded at a smooth 60 FPS. Leo was in Brazil, rain streaking across the screen, the sun setting in perfect low-poly glory.
Here’s a helpful, story-driven guide based on that subject line. The Racer That Refused to Fade: A Vita Owner’s Tale He exited to the LiveArea
He finished a race. No lag. No crash. It was perfect .
Leo loved his PS Vita. In 2021, while the world had moved on to PS5s and Steam Decks, he still treasured the little handheld for indie games and RPGs. But he had one regret: Horizon Chase Turbo . He’d played it on a friend’s Switch. The vibrant, low-poly sunsets and the thumping soundtrack were pure arcade bliss. But officially? It was never released on Vita in the USA. ux0:app/PCSB01366/ ├── eboot
If you find a clean -NoNpDrm- folder labeled for your region, copy it to ux0:app , refresh LiveArea twice, reboot, and you’re racing. No additional hacks, no compatibility layers. Just arcade perfection.
Leo almost believed them. Then one night, deep in a Reddit rabbit hole (r/VitaHacks), he saw a cryptic post: "Horizon Chase Turbo runs full speed. NoNpDrm. You just need the right files."
Leo copied the folder to his PC via USB (VitaShell in USB mode). The folder structure looked like this:
Every forum said the same thing: "Vita can’t handle it." "Devs abandoned it." "Too weak."