A playful malware script designed to display a video of Mario's levitating head, humorously requesting access to your computer and subsequently crashing it with a Blue Screen of Death. The script is developed primarily using standard Windows libraries, particularly DirectShow.
To build the project, ensure you have the following dependencies installed:
- MinGW - it's recommended to use MSYS2 on Windows. After installing MSYS2, or if you're on an Arch-based Linux distribution, run
pacman -S mingw-w64-i686-gcc
in the terminal to install MinGW. For other Linux distros, search formingw-w64
in your package manager or compile MinGW yourself. - Git - while optional, having Git installed simplifies the process of pulling the latest source code.
make
- if on MSYS2, runpacman -S mingw-w64-i686-make
to install the MinGW variant, otherwise install the regular version using your package manager.winpthreads
from Git - only necessary for extending compatibility to Windows 2000/XP. Installation methods vary based on your OS:- For MSYS2, run
pacman -S mingw-w64-winpthreads-git
in the terminal. - On an Arch-based distro, you can use the
mingw-w64-winpthreads-git
AUR package. - Other Linux distributions require manual building, with source code available here.
- For MSYS2, run
Before building the project, make sure the PREFIX
, CXX
and WINDRES
variables match your environment. For MSYS2 or Arch Linux, no changes are necessary. For other Linux distributions, adjust them accordingly.
Finally, execute make
(or mingw-w64-i686-make
if on MSYS2) in the repository's root directory to build the executable.
The default video, assets/video.wmv
, is sourced from Mario Teaches Typing 2. It's a clip of Mario's dialogue from the level select screen, extracted from NintendoComplete's playthrough at 22:50.
To use an alternative video, replace the assets/video.wmv
file with your own Windows Media Video (WMV) file, ensuring it's named video.wmv
. For video conversion, you can use tools like FFmpeg:
ffmpeg -i input.mp4 -b 512k output.wmv
This project is licensed under the MIT License. Refer to the LICENSE file for details.
Contributions, whether issues or pull requests, are highly encouraged and welcomed. Feel free to contribute in any capacity!