Now, the Khinsider site is technically music piracy to some degree but you don't see Sega going after ROM sites or fangames that much either. When i checked for the last time before leaving the site for good, the Genesis/Mega Drive Time Trax prototype soundtrack by Tim Follin was still there (thank god) so the latter point might not apply completely (Unless the album was listed as " Sega Genesis/Mega Drive" rather than just 'Genesis/Mega Drive"). MusicWebGames - Music interactive websites.Īnother thing i realized, whoever contacted the site owner apparently said to take down "ALL albums with Sega in their name" which means soundtracks for games that were developed by 2nd-party studios at the time (Vectorman, Gunstar Heroes, etc.) or games developed for the Genesis/Mega Drive as well as earlier or later consoles by 3rd parties were probably taken down as well.
VGCovers - For remixers, ran by remixers. Gamemusic_jp - Gamemusic subreddit in Japan. Newgamemusic - games from the last 3 years. Please check out the rules before posting List of video game music related radio stations and podcasts.įavorite soundtrack ever? New soundtrack coming out? Got a cool site to share, or a video of yourself playing some awesome game music? Great!.Video was originally uploaded to the 'Da Laser Reactive. A LaserDisc containing playthroughs of Namco's Galaxian 3: Project Dragoon and Galaxian 3: Attack of the Zolgear along with data on enemies encountered in both games and the 'unsuccessful mission' endings. List of composers, message psycosulu to add your favorite composer. laserdisc, galaxian, galaxian 3, namco, video games, galaxian, galaxian 3, namco.List of remixers, message psycosulu to add your favorite remixer.Contains VGM sites, events, news and subreddit related stuff.Non-disc titles that use this title type are listed here. A partial list of example games and their IDs is found on the Disc based games page.
#Galaxian 3 khinsider install
Games found on retail game discs have Title-IDs starting with 00010000, or 00010004 if they install a channel. VWii only NANDLoader common for all titles, used as an Ancast Image to boot titles.Ī version of the Dragon Quest X apploader in Ancast format. Internally called: "GAMECUBE BOOTROM for REVOLUTION" GameCube compatibility IOS - active while GameCube games are being played on the Wii. Used to start GameCube games - sets Hollywood speed to 162MHz, loads boot2, which then eventually loads MIOS
#Galaxian 3 khinsider code
This title ID is used in the boot2 TMD it does not exist in /title.įirst PPC code to execute on the Wii during startup it is loaded into RAM by IOS and then bootstrapped with 6 instructions from the Hollywood chip. Information on those can be found in the IOS History page. In the table below are the essential System Titles excluding all IOS modules. Also used for promotional GameCube disks. (The System Channels use this, and so do all the ones you can buy in the Wii Shop) The following system codes are known to exist: Custom Channels (such as the Homebrew Channel) do not usually follow these codes, and no 00000001 titles use them (because they are unneeded). The system code is the first letter of the four-letter title ID (the first two digits in the second section in hexadecimal notation). System codes are used to determine what type of title it is. Also used by DVDX v1-v6 and The Homebrew Channel versions 1.0.4 and earlier. Used by some WiiWare / Virtual Console titles. Japanese Import to USA and other NTSC regions. Japanese Import to Europe, Australia and other PAL regions.Īmerican Import to Europe, Australia and other PAL regions. Unofficially used by The Homebrew Channel 1.0.5 and newer. Zelda: A Link to the Past.įrench-speaking regions. Used by emulated games released in mainland China on the Nvidia Shield TV. System channels like the Mii Channel use it. The following region codes are known to exist:Īll regions. Essential system titles save for system "channels" with region specific information, do not use region codes. The region code is the last letter of the four-letter title ID (the last two digits in hexadecimal notation). Region codes are used to determine what region a title belongs to.