In Windows Explorer, drag and drop the game image file (*.cue or *.ccd) onto the mednafen.exe file to start emulation.Copy the ROM file syscard3.pce in the 'firmware' folder of Mednafen (create the folder if it does not exist, or run mednafen.exe once to create the folder structure).Decompress the game, the emulator and the BIOS archives.
#Syscard3.pce download Pc
Download the TurboGrafx / PC Engine CD System Card 3.0 ROM image included in the OpenEmu BIOS Pack.Download Theron's Quest for TurboGrafx / PC Engine.Might just take a tad more work.Luckily there’s only all of about 20 games that would run on that 2.0 card lol.
Which, in this setup that was a simple switch to point it at a different emu.exeNot sure where I’ll end up on that decision, but certainly sounds like a ‘cleaner’ alternative. Then just point to the folder with the version you want to use in the game’s override config.That’s not a half bad ideaAs it stands, I have all the 2.0 “TurboGrafx-CD” games in one wheel, and a seperate “TurboDuo” wheel for everything that needed a newer version card. You’d have a folder for each version of the syscard and that version inside it.
Awakened 52027:A cleaner way to do that would be to use per game overrides with different system folders set. Stumbled back across this, and I hate leaving threads without resolution.For anyone possibly wondering the same thing I DID get it to work.I setup a barebones “RetroArch - Alt” installation by copying over only the necessary files from my normal RetroArch.Then in RocketLauncher I just created a “RetroArch - Alt” emulator and pointed it towards the same module as RA.I then put the 2.0 card in RA-Alt’s system folder and voila!Now I get the proper TurboGrafx-CD loading screen on those games, and the JP one on the PCE-CD games. Similarly, I believe anyone playing a game on a TurboDuo (which as I recall didn’t use a system card for the CD BIOS and just had the 3.0 BIOS built-in) would always see the Super CD-ROM^2 BIOS screen before booting a CD game. There’s nothing “wrong” about using the Super CD card (i.e., the 3.0 rom) with ‘normal’ CD games that don’t require it as it was 100% backwards compatible as far as I know - I certainly never bothered to use the older 2.0 card that came with the Turbo CD once I got the Super CD card, unless I explicitly wanted to see what a Super CD game’s error message was with the older card (and as you noted, Dracula X has one of the more amusing ones). I owned a TurboGrafx-16 with CD add-on, and later on got the Super CD card so I could play Super CD games on it (actually I still do it’s just not hooked up at this point in time) so I know something about this. I could be completely way off bass here though.I can’t say anything about the bios screen because I use a patched version of the syscard3.pce that bypasses the boot screen and I have had no problems loading any pce, supergrafx or cd game I have thrown at it./QUOTEI hope you’l forgive my ignorance, but “Arcade Card”? What is that, exactly? I’m still pretty new to the NEC line of systems. QUOTE=lordmonkus 46246I might be wrong here but I think the games that aren’t compatible with the 2.0 bios are games that require the “arcade” card.