Skip to content
Logo

Hackaday

  • Home
  • Blog
  • Hackaday.io
  • Contests
  • Submit
  • About

sign in

1 Articles

Restore Your Formerly Useless Ouya Console

August 3, 2022 by Bryan Cockfield 18 Comments

Plenty of electronics end up in the junk drawer or even landfill after their useful life ends, but in the modern world of planned obsolescence a lot more devices are thrown out simply because of lack of support. Sometimes it’s even worse than that as some products are designed to “phone home” and will lack critical functionality if the original producer of that product gets purchased by someone else, wants to sell its customers more products, or goes out of business. The latter is essentially what happened to the Ouya console, but if you still have one of these around you might be able to get it running again.

The Ouya was a commercial failure but an ambitious take on a new kind of gaming console. With little more processing power than a smart phone, the idea was to produce a console for the casual gamer that also could play retro games and other games available for Android. It had a low price point but eventually couldn’t sell enough units to stay in business. These devices needed to see a specific server to gain full functionality, and [Christian] has created essentially a spoofed server that allows users to sign in to their consoles and install games again. All that is needed is to modify a few config files on the Ouya to point to a different address and the Ouya boots up just like it’s 2012 again.

This project goes a long way to show that there are plenty of serviceable electronics out there that have just been needlessly borked, and with a little elbow grease it’s sometimes possible to get them working. The state of this machine is a little surprising given that the original machine promised to be hacker and developer friendly.

Thanks to [Josiah] for the tip!

Posted in GamesTagged android, console, game, Ouya, phone home, server, sign in

Search

Never miss a hack

Follow on facebook Follow on twitter Follow on youtube Follow on rss Contact us

Subscribe

If you missed it

  • The Merits Of Comment-Driven Development As Counterweight To TDD

    45 Comments
  • NASA Announces Artemis III Crew And Ambitious Goals

    29 Comments
  • Revisiting Using AI Coding Assistants: You’re Holding It Wrong Edition

    112 Comments
  • Hunting Submarines Via Gravity Is A Tough Errand

    58 Comments
  • Remember When Flash Drives Were Going To Make Your PC Faster?

    46 Comments
More from this category

Our Columns

  • Patterns Everywhere

    14 Comments
  • Hackaday Podcast Ep 373: GPS, Danger In Space, And Robby The Robot

    2 Comments
  • This Week In Security: Microsoft On Microsoft, Register Your Domains, Linux On ARM, And FreeBSD Joins The File Cache Club

    17 Comments
  • FLOSS Weekly Episode 870: Open Source Gardening

    6 Comments
  • Hackaday Links: June 7, 2026

    8 Comments
More from this category

Search

Never miss a hack

Follow on facebook Follow on twitter Follow on youtube Follow on rss Contact us

Subscribe

If you missed it

  • The Merits Of Comment-Driven Development As Counterweight To TDD

    45 Comments
  • NASA Announces Artemis III Crew And Ambitious Goals

    29 Comments
  • Revisiting Using AI Coding Assistants: You’re Holding It Wrong Edition

    112 Comments
  • Hunting Submarines Via Gravity Is A Tough Errand

    58 Comments
  • Remember When Flash Drives Were Going To Make Your PC Faster?

    46 Comments
More from this category

Categories

Our Columns

  • Patterns Everywhere

    14 Comments
  • Hackaday Podcast Ep 373: GPS, Danger In Space, And Robby The Robot

    2 Comments
  • This Week In Security: Microsoft On Microsoft, Register Your Domains, Linux On ARM, And FreeBSD Joins The File Cache Club

    17 Comments
  • FLOSS Weekly Episode 870: Open Source Gardening

    6 Comments
  • Hackaday Links: June 7, 2026

    8 Comments
More from this category

Recent comments

  • CRJEEA on The Pacemaker Patch
  • Foldi-One on Behold A 60 Hz Refresh Rate E-ink Monitor
  • Andrew on The Air Position Indicator For The B-29
  • Jonathan Wilson on The Pacemaker Patch
  • PhillyCheez on The Pacemaker Patch
  • Michael on Converting A Scanning Electron Microscope Into A TEM Is Surprisingly Easy
  • CRJEEA on Bambuddy Says Bye To Bambu Lab Cloud Services
  • craig on The Pacemaker Patch
  • CRJEEA on Robot Chess But Each Piece Is A Small Robot
  • Sean on Bambuddy Says Bye To Bambu Lab Cloud Services
Logo
  • Home
  • Blog
  • Hackaday.io
  • Video
  • Submit A Tip
  • About
  • Contact Us

Never miss a hack

Follow on facebook Follow on twitter Follow on youtube Follow on rss Contact us

Subscribe to Newsletter

Copyright © 2026 | Hackaday, Hack A Day, and the Skull and Wrenches Logo are Trademarks of Hackaday.com | Privacy Policy | Terms of Service | Digital Services Act | Do not sell or share my personal informationCookie Management
Powered by WordPress VIP