Where to (legally) acquire content to play on RetroPie
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This post is deleted! -
Gotta add STREEMERZ
https://www.fauxgame.com/ -
@benmclean I noticed that there is not an ARCADE section to this post. Since running MAME is a very common goal of RetroPie users, I would suggest adding Gridlee, a game that was created with emulation and distribution in mind from the get-go. It is a great one for setup and testing of MAME.
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@caver01 said in Where to (legally) acquire content to play on RetroPie:
@benmclean I noticed that there is not an ARCADE section to this post. Since running MAME is a very common goal of RetroPie users, I would suggest adding Gridlee, a game that was created with emulation and distribution in mind from the get-go. It is a great one for setup and testing of MAME.
Added! :)
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@BenMcLean Here is a link to a set of homebrew
ColecoVision
ROMs. Some fantastic clones and great original games. http://www.colecovision.ca/roms_homebrew_0-9.php -
All of the Neo Geo games at GOG seem to work flawlessly on RetroPie 4.3 (I only checked their attract mode and some minutes into actual gameplay). So, I think they would fit nicely into this topic's list.
You'll need the neogeo.zip and [romname].zip (e.g. pulstar.zip) from the GOG installer file. The Linux .sh installers are just zip files you should be able to extract with any zip tool. On Linux/Retropie, this could be unzip:
unzip pulstar_en_gog_1_15377.sh -d .
Mind the "." at the end, it means "current directory" in Linux. The option -d determines the directory to extract to. You could also use another extraction path after the -d option. The neogeo.zip and [romname].zip are located in the subdirectory data/noarch/game/ .
Alternatively, you could extract the Windows .exe installers with the tool innoextract that's available for Windows and Linux. For Pulstar, the command on Linux/Retropie would be:
innoextract "setup_pulstar_gog-1_(14775).exe"
Here, the neogeo.zip and [romname].zip are located in the subdirectory app/ .
Important: You have to put the filename into quotationmarks if it contains special characters like "(" or ")" that are used as operators by the Linux shell itself. Otherwise, you'd have to put a backslash "\" before every single special character, e.g. "\(" and "\)" in the example above.
edit: According to @Eckaji, some Windows versions of the GOG Neo Geo games are modified and won't work in Retropie. So, you should prefer the Linux installers.
edit 2: Some of them are only listed for Windows, but all of those have (not officially supported) Mac & Linux versions in their "Goodies" download section. Thanks to @Eckaji for making me aware of this.
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ColecoVision NORTH: Added.
Neo Geo games on GOG: Added.
Thanks
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@benmclean Thank you, the same to you! What do you think about a link to my post above for instructions about extracting the roms?
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@clyde said in Where to (legally) acquire content to play on RetroPie:
@benmclean Thank you, the same to you! What do you think about a link to my post above for instructions about extracting the roms?
Sure OK.
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@benmclean Thanks again. :)
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Mega Man Legacy Collection and how to extract the NES roms here
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@bense2k said in Where to (legally) acquire content to play on RetroPie:
Mega Man Legacy Collection and how to extract the NES roms here
Great find! See also the creator's awesome GDC talk where he tells companies to be sensible about emulation for a change.
People are perfectly happy to pay for ROMs if you give them a way to do it. But make no mistake: we will in fact get the ROMs one way or another, so game companies choices are to 1. Profit from this or 2. Not profit from this. There's no such thing as a third option in which people don't get the ROMs and anyone who thinks there should be can go to hell.
I added the Mega Man Legacy Collection.
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@benmclean I agree with you in so far that I buy any roms legally I can get my hands on. But to justify using illegal roms by saying "we will get the ROMs one way or the other" is a lame excuse for ignoring other's rights, in this case those of the copyright holders. But if you ignore other's rights that easily, why should anyone respect yours?
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@clyde said in Where to (legally) acquire content to play on RetroPie:
But to justify using illegal roms by saying "we will get the ROMs one way or the other" is a lame excuse for ignoring other's rights
I think you've got how this works backwards.
I'm not a pirate because I do whatever the hell I want.
I do whatever the hell I want because I'm a pirate. Arr!
in this case those of the copyright holders.
Copyright is intended to promote progress, not stop people from running decades old software on whatever devices they own which they can get working. If game companies aren't selling ROMs then screw them. They should have been on top of this 15 years ago.
But if you ignore other's rights that easily, why should anyone respect yours?
If I'm using DRM then they shouldn't, because DRM takes away individual physical private property rights, which are more important because they are a natural right, while copyright is an artificial convenience.
Now batten down yer hatches, landlubber, or I'll make ye walk the plank! Yo ho ho and a bottle of ROMs!
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@clyde
How about this one: It is a company's job to compete with what's readily available. I'm not going to try and help them if they're incapable of this. (A good example is SEGA Genesis Classics Collection on Steam. It's basically just a bunch of roms, but I bought it because it presents itself really well and has workshop integration.) -
@benmclean said in Where to (legally) acquire content to play on RetroPie:
Copyright is intended to promote progress, not stop people from running decades old software on whatever devices they own which they can get working. If game companies aren't selling ROMs then screw them. They should have been on top of this 15 years ago.
So, every time other's rights don't suit your needs, you think you're right to ignore them? Again, why should anyone respect your rights, then? Do you want to live in a world where everyone's rights are naught the moment they're inconvenient to someone else?
If I'm using DRM then they shouldn't, because DRM takes away individual physical private property rights, which are more important because they are a natural right, while copyright is an artificial convenience.
There are no "natural rights". Rights are granted to you by people (peer groups, societies, organisations etc.) Try to go into the wilderness and see if nature respects your right to life and physical integrity.
Where did you get this differentiation from other than your convenience anyway?
@slimy said in Where to (legally) acquire content to play on RetroPie:
@clyde
How about this one: It is a company's job to compete with what's readily available. I'm not going to try and help them if they're incapable of this.I'm not sure what you want to say with this. Do you mean that companies can and should compete with cheap or even free illegal copies of their rightful property? And/or that they have some kind of unwritten (maybe moral) obligation to make their property available? If you didn't mean either of that, please explain it a bit further.
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There are no "natural rights".
Well then, you've got nothing to complain about.
Try to go into the wilderness and see if nature respects your right to life and physical integrity.
It's not the wilderness which makes natural rights natural. It's the law of human nature.
[Video Redacted]
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This is an all ages forum. Be civil and keep it clean.
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@benmclean said in Where to (legally) acquire content to play on RetroPie:
There are no "natural rights".
Well then, you've got nothing to complain about.
So, you agree that there are no natural rights? Then please make your argument again without them. If not, please refrain from rhetoric cop-outs and stay on topic.
It's not the wilderness which makes natural rights natural. It's the law of human nature.
[Video Moderated]
So, now there's a "law of human nature" that explains "natural rights" (for humans)? Please explain both without just referring to one another and how they apply to individual private property rights but not to copyright, which was your initial argument.
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@clyde said in Where to (legally) acquire content to play on RetroPie:
So, you agree that there are no natural rights?
Absolutely not. I'm just saying that if you were correct that there are no natural rights then there could be no artificial rights either, for what is artificial is always formed out of what is natural. And if there are no artificial rights then there's nothing for you to complain about when it comes to copyright.
So, now there's a "law of human nature" that explains "natural rights" (for humans)?
John Locke, Second Treatise on Government. Read it, then come back.
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