Anyone interested in extracting screenshots, music or movies from PSX games? Here's your tool:
Anyone interested in extracting screenshots, music or movies from PSX games? Here's your tool:
Last edited by Demon Cleaner; 23rd January 2007 at 07:40.
Very nice. Thanks
I may try this out later to extract some music.
If you haven't played a classic game in years, it's never too late to start!
I just tried it on Syphon Filter, which I had at work (?), and it worked fine. It just extracts what you want and saves bmp, wav, avi files to your folders. Pretty cool.
Sounds good.
If you haven't played a classic game in years, it's never too late to start!
I used to use PSXMC a lot a few years ago, to extract soundtracks and capture some of the cooler FMVs from some games. (and to watch the endings of some games I never completed, I admit.) But that was a much older version, and I remember it was quite a few games I had it couldn't find anything on. I think I'll be trying it out again with this version of the tool.
Do you know of any similar rippers for PS2 and Xbox games?
If you haven't played a classic game in years, it's never too late to start!
I have no idea
I will have to have a look around on some of the scene forums I use. I definitely want once for PS2. Imagine being able to rip the audio out of some of the best RPGs for example.
If you haven't played a classic game in years, it's never too late to start!
Yeah *shudder* and some FMV.Imagine being able to rip the audio out of some of the best RPGs for example.
It really depends on the filesystem on the disc. FMVs in PS2 games are often regular DVD tracks. Meaning there's a separate video and audio stream on there that needs to be combined before viewing. I guess it could be possible to rip these, but I never found a good method anywhere. Some people claimed to be able to do it, but there was never a simple method.
On audio-ripping on the other hand, I managed to rip the audio from Gauntlet Seven Sorrows recently myself. It doesn't use a standard PS2 filesystem, but rather Dreamcast format files. Not sure why, or how the game works like that. But anyway, a standard audio-conversion tool meant for Dreamcast audio files did the job there.
My point is, you can probably be successful ripping something by browsing the gamedisc, identifying the audio or video-files, find out what filetypes they are and then search for some conversion tool on the net. Worked for me with that Gauntlet audio anyway.