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    mame2003-plus: hundreds of new games, improved input, features, new bugs - now with runahead support

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    • matchamanM
      matchaman
      last edited by

      "As of May, 2018 a complete MAME 0.78 romset collection and a complete MAME 0.139 romset collection together include nearly all ROMs needed to rebuild a complete collection of mame2003-plus romsets."

      I'm about to make a brand new installation for Pi 4. Is that still the case for romsets?

      B ClydeC 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • B
        barbudreadmon @matchaman
        last edited by

        @matchaman I believe a few more recent dumps are also used by mame2003+, like recently dumped MCUs.

        FBNeo developer - github - forum

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • ClydeC
          Clyde @matchaman
          last edited by

          @matchaman

          In order to build a complete MAME 2003-Plus collection, the ingredients are:

          • A complete MAME 0.223 or later romset collection
          • A complete MAME 0.223 or later "rollback" romset collection
          • MAME 0.78 CHD collection
          • The NeoGeo UniBIOS 3.3, freely available at http://unibios.free.fr/

          Source: https://docs.libretro.com/library/mame2003_plus/#building-romsets-for-mame-2003-plus

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • RiverstormR
            Riverstorm
            last edited by

            You'll need a little more than current MAME and the rollback. You also need a handful of unofficial ROMs for some decrypted, demo and free play games. It's worth the time to find them as arcadez has added some real gems and updated classics with more accurate game play.

            If you want to be posh, if you will, ;) and 100% complete check out the OST's added by KMFDManic and grant. They are a very nice complement to games like Double Dragon, Final Fight, Mortal Kombat, Moonwalker, NBA Jam and Outrun.

            I think they are in the DAT so you'll have to find them or be ok with set errors. I know some people can be real nutters when it comes to incomplete sets, they just can't stand seeing the report of a few missing ROMs.

            It seems the stereo versions are a little more challenging to find but the mono are fairly easy. I think the custom OST's will become more widely available soon though, so keep an eye out.

            The mono version will play either the left or right channel bilateral and the stereo is basically split-stereo that is remixed on the fly (they are named identical but suffixed with a "-1" and "-2", for left/right channels respectfully. Some of the 16-bit stereo versions are over 300MB but they are easy to resize and keep the original intact if running on an NES mini or other limited resource console.

            I wouldn't worry to much about the CHD's pending your platform of choice and ability to rum them but I I think they are only around 16GB which is relatively small as current CHD's plus rollback CHDs combined are like 600 or 700GB. A current MAME complete set is so big now it has its own drive, I think it's around 1TB without extras.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • arcadez2003A
              arcadez2003
              last edited by arcadez2003

              Believe it or not dev still continues on this core just a wee update from me to let ya's all know you can now play the most requested
              "and up until now hoarded" Arcade game in the history of emulation using MAME2003+

              Marble Madness II

              marblmd2.png

              Arcade Addict

              AshpoolA 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 3
              • AshpoolA
                Ashpool @arcadez2003
                last edited by Ashpool

                @arcadez2003 Don't forget to mention Megumi Rescue ;] Had just read yesterday about marblmd2 and megrescu in the FBNeo Thread andthen I noticed that they are also within the current mame2003plus datfile ;)
                My Guess is in current Mame they will appear in the next incarnation (0.245) ;)

                arcadez2003A 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • arcadez2003A
                  arcadez2003 @Ashpool
                  last edited by arcadez2003

                  @Ashpool said in mame2003-plus: hundreds of new games, improved input, features, new bugs - now with runahead support:

                  @arcadez2003 Don't forget to mention Megumi Rescue ;] Had just read yesterday about marblmd2 and megrescu in the FBNeo Thread andthen I noticed that they are also within the current mame2003plus datfile ;)
                  My Guess is in current Mame they will appear in the next incarnation (0.245) ;)

                  I didn't think anyone would bother :) but yes Megumi Rescue is a decent wee game which is also now playable in MAME2003+ as i added support
                  for it last week nice game i like it mind and press the button to make the fireman dive through the windows

                  megrescu.png

                  Arcade Addict

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                  • AshpoolA
                    Ashpool @arcadez2003
                    last edited by Ashpool

                    By the way: I ever wanted to ask this, but somehow I always forgot to actually do it...

                    Besides the changelog mentioning updated/added "games", is there a database or some reference where we can check about the "state/rough mame version equivalence" of the roms in Mame2003Plus? So that we may cross reference within the Mameinfo Metadata whether certain roms may better be played using a more recent core? Just looking at the driver/emulation/graphic/sound states within the mame###.xml ain't helpfull here (just thinking about the cases where former driver: good states where changed to driver: preliminary, etc.). Or are the "drivers"/"implementations from"/"developments for" mame2003+ simply not comparable/locatable to a certain version/timestamp within mames history?

                    RiverstormR 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • RiverstormR
                      Riverstorm @Ashpool
                      last edited by

                      @Ashpool - I'm not sure if this helps for what you're looking for but it's a compatibility table, of the state, of each ROM in the core.

                      The core base comes from 0.78 is about as close as you'll get. Through the years several hundred games have been added/updated based on what the devs can make work on the old drivers in the core.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • RiverstormR
                        Riverstorm @Ashpool
                        last edited by

                        @Ashpool - Here's a rough MAME equivalent version for each Libretro core. I think current MAME has also been ported but I've never tried it.

                        mame2000 (based on MAME 0.37b5)
                        mame2003 (based on MAME 0.78)
                        mame2003-plus (based on MAME 0.78 + additions)
                        mame2010 (based on MAME 0.139)
                        mame2015 (based on MAME 0.160)
                        mame2016 (based on MAME 0.174)
                        
                        AshpoolA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • AshpoolA
                          Ashpool @Riverstorm
                          last edited by Ashpool

                          @Riverstorm Thanks, sounds like I "feared" that the information from mameinfo.dat ain't a usable reference in regards to mame2003+. To be more precise of what I had in mind, here is an example: If I look at the mameinfo data for llander1 (for reference here via the arcade database, the maminfo.dat information is on the info tab), I'm inclined to say that I want to use at least a mame version of .141u2, better .153 or even .190/.198 for that rom ... now, if llander1 would be (it ain't) among mame2003+ changelog list for games now fixed (or whatever), it would be nice to get some clue of where in this mameinfo.dat changelog it could be placed. Was just a thought, and no big deal if those thoughts where in a not-possible zone. [Edit: Well, at least one may assume (?) that each game mentioned within the changelog ain't .78 anymore]

                          B RiverstormR 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • B
                            barbudreadmon @Ashpool
                            last edited by

                            @Ashpool https://github.com/libretro/mame2003-plus-libretro/commits/master/src/drivers/asteroid.c => there should be no major change from how it was in 0.78.

                            FBNeo developer - github - forum

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • RiverstormR
                              Riverstorm @Ashpool
                              last edited by

                              @Ashpool - Ah, ok, yeah it's much less "formal". It's basically one long string of commits. There's no official change list between builds/commits with version numbers to help make an educated decision on the best version(s).

                              They have over 4,000 commits. You can see half dozen changes one day down to none for several in a row. They add and tweak games here and there when they have time.

                              You could search pull requests something like is:pr is:closed llander and see there have been some updates to llander but that's not quite as handy. There's nothing quite as organized like in mameinfo.dat.

                              If I remember someone built a fairly extensive spreadsheet of games, based on which emulator works best for each game. That's in the context of RetroPie supported emulators but I don't have the link off hand. I suppose that changes over time too! :-)

                              B 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • RiverstormR
                                Riverstorm @Ashpool
                                last edited by

                                @Ashpool - Or Barbudreadmon has another good suggestion! :)

                                AshpoolA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • B
                                  barbudreadmon @Riverstorm
                                  last edited by

                                  @Riverstorm said in mame2003-plus: hundreds of new games, improved input, features, new bugs - now with runahead support:

                                  If I remember someone built a fairly extensive spreadsheet of games, based on which emulator works best for each game.

                                  You are probably refering to @roslof's spreadsheet.

                                  FBNeo developer - github - forum

                                  RiverstormR 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • AshpoolA
                                    Ashpool @Riverstorm
                                    last edited by

                                    @Riverstorm As I had hoped to express in my above post... llander1 was just an example and I was aware of the fact that it still is .78 stuff... but it was the 1st rom that came to my mind to use it as an example in regards to the mameinfo stuff... could as well have used indytemp or others... for one that is in the changelog of m2k3+ it could have been lupin3, but even if the changelog mentions it under "Games now with Sound" it lists sampleof "invaders" in the current listxml.dat, I can deduct -> better then .78, as that had no sampleset, but less then .147u3 as that changed the sampleof to "lupin3"... Oh well, and sorry - I am expanding on a topic which is answered by now. And your explanation about the development/commits was also helpfull to understand the whies of it.

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • RiverstormR
                                      Riverstorm @barbudreadmon
                                      last edited by

                                      @barbudreadmon - Yeah, that's it, thank you! :)

                                      @Ashpool - I agree that kind of "intermediate" build detail currently happening on these forlonged cores would be quite useful. But since it's all for-the-love-of-it volunteer work I think the devs mostly put their energy and focus into development vs. documenting...not saying someone couldn't add it for the benefit of all, it's on Github, a perfect spot for it under metadata! ;)

                                      If you're using RetroPie you could check out the spreadsheet link @barbudreadmon posted above as a potential starting point. @roslof's spreadsheet has always been impressive from the sheer amount of time he put into testing each game to find a decent running version/emulator.

                                      I don't know...but I think with these old patch work of cores, it's down to elbow grease and a bit of spit and shine to build that "perfect" game roster! ;)

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • RiverstormR
                                        Riverstorm
                                        last edited by

                                        @Ashpool - One other thought (sorry to make assumptions), was the target hardware is the Pi 4 or some similar low power device. I always assume RetroPie (thanks to their grace for an amazing piece of software) targets a niche demographic, well a pretty large one. Due to it's multi-faceted, multi-platform, arcade, console, DOS, porting, retro-gaming support all-in-one game--jack knife utility! Whew...they're gonna have to steal the Nethack slogan, "the devs thought of everything"...

                                        Anyway I think if you're running "contemporary" hardware there are more elegant solutions to running MAME with fantastic results. Funny thing is most days I still prefer the tinkering on the Pi to get these old cores chugging along with some less than perfect game satisfactorily, hence the spreadsheet posted above.

                                        AshpoolA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • AshpoolA
                                          Ashpool @Riverstorm
                                          last edited by Ashpool

                                          @Riverstorm said in mame2003-plus: hundreds of new games, improved input, features, new bugs - now with runahead support:

                                          @Ashpool - One other thought (sorry to make assumptions), was the target hardware is the Pi 4 or some similar low power device. I always assume RetroPie (thanks to their grace for an amazing piece of software) targets a niche demographic, well a pretty large one. Due to it's multi-faceted, multi-platform, arcade, console, DOS, porting, retro-gaming support all-in-one game--jack knife utility! Whew...they're gonna have to steal the Nethack slogan, "the devs thought of everything"...

                                          Ok, You've got me there... I was still building up my reply to some former posts... but your wording here is somewhat in grip of what I was trying to express ;>

                                          @Riverstorm Yup, that spreadsheet was new to me and a good resource added in my bookmarks ;) My intention instead was not based on a use case for a specific system/install, but instead somewhat more general - I am not interested in best performance/or whatsoever on a certain system, but instead I want(ed) to check the (min. version of emulator) for the most accurate emulation for now (even if that would mean that I cannot run it on a Pi 3/4, or even my desktop pcs, nor in current mame) available for that rom. As history has shown driver/emulation/color/graphic/whatsoever states within the listxml changed from greed to yellow or red and for some they still remain on ~not_good...

                                          And here I noticed your reply whilst I was typing my answer... so shortcut: I am just a metadata hungry junky, I am not asking about a certain environment/system/whatsoever for a certain game... it is just my interest to get a personal mind map of what game/what system/what state to be played (if at all or wait) on what emulator/simulator/hardware and therefore the question where m2k3+ roms may be located... and sadly there are still many where I am not sure if any emulator will perform like the machine I played in my childhood (Indytemp, Astron Belt (ok, that is not MAME for now), etc.)...

                                          RiverstormR B 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • RiverstormR
                                            Riverstorm @Ashpool
                                            last edited by

                                            @Ashpool - Ok that makes sense. One quick question. Are you saying the mame2003-plus DAT has incorrect metadata on the game status? If so I think the devs over on Github would find it useful. They try and keep the DAT correct and current and have done a decent job. If I read it wrong or if you meant "generally speaking" of DATs, disregard.

                                            https://github.com/libretro/mame2003-plus-libretro

                                            and sadly there are still many where I am not sure if any emulator will perform like the machine I played in my childhood (Indytemp, Astron Belt...

                                            Sadly no game performs like nostalgia! ;)

                                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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