Modérateurs : Aer, Equipe forum MATA-WEB
Jeux vidéo : Amis des pixels ou de la Next generation bienvenues !
Tetho a écrit:L'ajout des barre de charge dans 2X est loin d'être aussi significatif que le changement de système de charge entre KOF '95 et '96.
Yo-Dan a écrit:Vous en voulez, du Street Fighter 2 ?
Les mots me manquent.... (En fait, non, mais ils sont très grossiers).
Tetho a écrit:Wonk > la dégradation du lecteur c'était surtout du à la médiocrité des matériaux utilisés dans la PS1, la PSone et la PS2 étaient autrement plus fiables à ce niveau. Quand aux disques, bien stockés ils durent encore. Regarde les vieux CD de tes parents des années 70 et leur platine d'époque. Ça tourne encore comme un charme.
(Et l'idée même de souffler sur les connecteurs d'une cartouche est une hérésie en soit, Iwata Ackbar ! Si tu veux que dans dix ans ta cartouche ne soit plus lisible c'est la façon la plus sûr de s'en assurer)
Back in 2010, a blogger on the video game website RF Generation, frustrated with a series of purchases in which the games had suffered a degree of “disc rot” before reaching him, wrote a PSA to the game-collector community, calling on them to keep an eye out regarding the problem.
The blogger, who goes under the pseudonym “slackur” or “Jesse Mysterious,” then described a harrowing tale for a serious collector: After reading up on the disc rot problem, he went through his game collection, much of it in mint condition, and found white specs on many of the discs—a major tell sign of “disc rot,” or the eventual decay of optical media.
I’ll let him take it from here:
Even though it is only one little dot, it represents damage that cannot be repaired. No scratch removal process can restore the data that is now lost. The game is forever damaged, and likely to get worse over the years.
Now, many sources online will claim that disc rot is a limited-scope problem, concerning only a few years worth of discs from certain manufacturers, (and CD-Rs) and that it is not wide-spread.
But when I learned about this problem, I checked my several hundred discs between Sega CD, Turbo CD, Saturn, and even Dreamcast games and found DOZENS had this problem. Several expensive games I owned were mint—except when held to the light I could see one or more little white dots that proved my game had damage. Some of these I went back to play after not touching for years and found they now would occasionally lock up or not play at all. I had a few FACTORY SEALED games that I opened and found the same thing.
It has been a nerve-shattering nightmare for a collector like me.
Michele Youket, a preservation specialist at the Library of Congress, often deals with similar situations in her role. She says that this kind of silent destruction, which shows up in three different forms—the “bronzing” of discs, small pin-hole specs located on the discs, or “edge-rot”—became an important one for the national library when the organization started archiving music on CD formats, with the format’s weaknesses soon becoming apparent.
Tetho a écrit:Je croyais que tu ne pouvais pas supporter ce jeu ? C'est pousser le fétichisme du manuel un peu loin là.
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