Super Mario 64/Xbox Port

In the Alcatraz East museum, a display for counterfeit games/game products is shown to demonstrate that video game copyright infringement is illegal. One of these counterfeit games included on the display would be the Super Mario 64 Xbox Port, which is an unusual sight. The game is an unofficial port of Nintendo's Super Mario 64 on Microsoft's Xbox console.

Oddities around the game start from the boxart itself which contains renders stolen from Super Mario 64 DS, not the original game that it was named after. Along with this, the cover states that online capabilities were enabled through Xbox Live, even though the original Super Mario 64 game didn't have any online features at all. The most likely scenario for the online features would be that it's false advertising; a downplayed version of some bootleg video game covers.

The port is theorized to be most likely an emulated port of Super Mario 64, with little to no appearance of the Personalisation A.I. The only differences would probably be controller input and emulation errors, which are somewhat different from the A.I itself. Most bootleg games don't have quality control, so this is likely to be the case.

Authenticity
Although it would be simpler to say that the video game box was made just for the museum and that the Xbox port isn't real, the conspiracies surrounding Super Mario 64 make this simple concept up to question. Ports of Super Mario 64 throughout many consoles/computers have been possible through emulation, but placing said games as physical copies up on stores of that nature would be less likely to find. Nonetheless, it has been seen to be done, considering what has been shown on the display.

Another favor in the authenticity of a physical Xbox copy of Super Mario 64 would be that some of the counterfeit products on display are real. One of these examples would be the WiNi console, which although looks to be a bootleg Wii console, is a clone of the Nintendo Famicom (clones of this console are dubbed Famiclones) with built-in games inside of it. Since there are some authentic bootlegs on display, it is not out of the question that the Xbox port of Super Mario 64 was on store shelves.

Documentation on the Xbox port of Super Mario 64 only seems to cover emulating the game on the console, not of the physical copy of it. If there was an Xbox port of Super Mario 64 of this caliber, it would be reported on somewhere on the internet. Of course, some of this information could've been taken down by Nintendo themselves.

Trivia

 * Another alleged Mario game "Super Diabetic Mario Brothers" was also shown to be an Xbox game, judging from box art alone. Whether or not these two games are connected or not is up for debate. The only known copy of Super Diabetic Mario Brothers is owned by American television host Conan O'Brien, much like how the only copy of the Xbox port is on the Alcatraz East Museum.