- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
[email protected] - A silly milestone we passed sometime this year: The Internet Archive now emulates (to various degrees, of course), over 250,000 pieces of software, hardware, and electronics, thanks to the effort of a dozen emulation projects and all of them running in the browser. Live again, ancient software!
Love the Internet Archive. They’re my second favorite place to get ROMs, and it’s specially important now that most ROM sites are borderline useless with most links removed.
First place goes to one specific FTP server that contains a clean copy of every single possible ROM, for every system imaginable, with high speed downloads and the correct file extensions. I have copies of their IP address in multiple places, hell, I might tattoo it, I’ll die with this number imprinted on my brain my fear of losing it is so high.
Just a few days ago, I was looking for an obscure copy of an old CD called “Walnut Creek Game Patches CDROM” - I found references to this inside an old DOS game cheats program, so I got curious and wanted to check it out - and was pleasantly surprised to find it on the Internet Archive.
Removed by mod
Vimm’s lair is awesome for roms. Its downloads are slow, but the website is organized and no spammy ads.
Vimm is great for most retro systems, but when you get into the disc-based era, the proprietary or alternative formats are pretty bad. For Wii, you download a weird stripped down ISO format that requires a random piece of software to restore into an usable format, for instance.
Ah, I didn’t realize that. I mostly have played PS2 games that seem to work pretty well. I’ve downloaded, but haven’t actually tried any of the newer system stuff. I’ll give the internet archive a shot then.
Agree.
I got a huge file of arcade ROMs there…but many of them are MAME broken so ymmv.
ETA: FTP?!?! Ppl still FTP?
Can you DM that ip address please?
Seconded.
Thirded!
Fourthed
fifthed
Sixthied!