Exactly how do you get an emulator to work onj your dreamcast? I downloaded a neo geo emu, but I don't have any idea of how to make it work. I'm not sure if this is the right forum to put this in, but any help would be GREATLY appreciated. Thanks!
Exactly how do you get an emulator to work onj your dreamcast? I downloaded a neo geo emu, but I don't have any idea of how to make it work. I'm not sure if this is the right forum to put this in, but any help would be GREATLY appreciated. Thanks!
The easiest way is to download pre-made disk images which have the emulator combined with a boot disk. If that's the case, you simply burn and go. If you downloaded an image without any roms, you will need to supply your own roms and probably copy them into the directory before you burn the disc.Originally Posted by atm55
Lots and lots of info here: http://www.dcemulation.com
Just wanted to add something since I just ran into this problem. I have two burners a 4x DVD+R drive and an old 4x CD-R drive. The DVD+R drive will not burn CD's any slower than 16x, which my Dreamcast will not read. I had to use my old drive (good thing I kept it) to burn at 4x so my Dreamcast would read the CD. Just something to keep in mind.
Whoa that's suprising my Pioneer AO5 burns CDs at 4x without any trouble, but that is the bottom speed for it too.Originally Posted by poopnes
I've heard of people havinf problems with the burn speed, and also with certain media.
The most common problem is not having the correct Dreamcast. You have to have one that was made during certain dates whcih I do not recall.
Try Here
http://www.dcemulation.com/dcemu-nesterdc.htm
That's where I learned the little I know..
Trebuken
That's not true. It's been found out that ALL Dreamcast will play burned discs.Originally Posted by Trebuken
If you have one that doesn't it has a laser that is dying or the media wasn't burned properly.
Cool. Took some effort to find correctly dated systems too...
Good to know. Glad I picked up another unit. Maybe I can make them emulator specific now....get a couple more dirt cheap somewhere...
Haven't tried much emulation of late on a Dreamcast. Been thinking of making the leap to an Xbox modchip, but I cannot decide on which one...want to have to component output...
Trebuken
Thanks for aksing this question. I was wanting to know myself....
After googling your drive it seems your Pioneer will not burn CDRs faster than 16x so that might be why. Mine will burn at 40x max.Originally Posted by njiska
And its just a good tip, don't burn your CD's faster than 4x.
Actually, you are wrong on that. Not all Dreamcast's will play burned discs -- at the end of the lifecycle, Sega redesigned the Dreamcast to lock out CDs. Fortunately (if you want to play emulators or new games ), they made barely any of these systems... and then when the Dreamcast sold really well and Sega re-started their factories for a short while to manufacture more consoles for Japan, they used the spare parts from the originals.Originally Posted by jonjandran
Chances are there are less than 100,000 Dreamcasts that cannot play burned discs, and almost all of them ended up in Asia. I have seen and know people with them, but of the 100 or so consoles I've had my hands on within the last three years, I have never found one myself.
By the way, if anyone has one, I'd be happy to trade for the other type
Dan Loosen
http://www.goatstore.com/ - http://www.midwestgamingclassic.com/
** Trying to finish up an overly complete Dreamcast collection... want to help? (Updated 5/3/10!) http://www.digitpress.com/forum/showthread.php?t=61333
And actually you're wrong about that. Check out this page: http://dreamlover.tecbox.com/#6.1Originally Posted by goatdan
That article is mentioning systems that were manufactured in 2000. The ones that don't work come from 2001 and were probably only released to the Asian market. Of the two people that I know with one, one lives in Japan and the other picked his up on a visit there. Unlike the Dreamcast's the article mentions, these ones lock out all CD functionality (meaning you can't play an audio CD either).Originally Posted by poopnes
My 100,000 number is probably higher than what really came out by a lot. For all I know, maybe a few prototypes of the system were packed up and shipped out when Japan started their lines up the final time. I do know that they do exist though.
Dan Loosen
http://www.goatstore.com/ - http://www.midwestgamingclassic.com/
** Trying to finish up an overly complete Dreamcast collection... want to help? (Updated 5/3/10!) http://www.digitpress.com/forum/showthread.php?t=61333
...
Thanks for pointing that out and proving me wrong! =) I didn't realize that there were DC's that totally locked out CD's--even CD playing functionality. Learn something new everyday, you do.Originally Posted by goatdan
No problem Don't worry about it -- I don't think that too many people actually know about this revision, but a few people that I know of were actually consulted about it. It seemed that a certain company liked having a platform out that smaller developers could work on without having to buy an offiical dev-kit, but not one which could have all of its games pirated easily. They didn't want to lock out the legal things that were going on, but they felt that they had too...Originally Posted by poopnes
In the end, it all basically ended up moot, as Sega killed the Dreamcast just as they were changing over the line.
Dan Loosen
http://www.goatstore.com/ - http://www.midwestgamingclassic.com/
** Trying to finish up an overly complete Dreamcast collection... want to help? (Updated 5/3/10!) http://www.digitpress.com/forum/showthread.php?t=61333
Do you have a screen shot of the main menu of these Dreamcasts or at least do you have a rough idea of how they looked. Curious as to how it was changed.Originally Posted by goatdan
I don't, but apparently you put in an audio CD, and the Dreamcast does the same thing that it does when it can't read a disc that is put into it. Beyond that, everything looks the same.Originally Posted by poopnes
That's why I don't believe these ever went into big time production. Sega would've at least cleaned that up a bit, at least, I would have hoped so.
Dan Loosen
http://www.goatstore.com/ - http://www.midwestgamingclassic.com/
** Trying to finish up an overly complete Dreamcast collection... want to help? (Updated 5/3/10!) http://www.digitpress.com/forum/showthread.php?t=61333
just pick and flip it over.
if you see number "2" circled in the big sticker on DC bottom the chances are it won't play CD...
This is NOT true and please stop repeating thingsthat aren't true.Originally Posted by dj898
I have 7 with the 2 circled and they all read CD's.
Read this article and look in the column under "Non-Working Models" and notice it says "It has been determined all models, that were previously thought un-working, infact do work that were in this list. So this concludes that so far, all DC's work "
http://www.dcemulation.com/article-supported.htm
This was proved a couple of years ago.
use DC factory to burn ur stuff... either that or discjuggler
BTW dan, do your games work on those select "non compatible" DCs... I dont think they are on GDR, are they?