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Post by deftonesrule on Apr 26, 2006 19:28:08 GMT -5
hey all i just need the name of the ps2 bios thanks
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Post by TheCloudOfSmoke on Apr 27, 2006 12:52:05 GMT -5
You can find the name on the back of your PS2. It should be something like SCPH-*****.
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Post by Sune on Apr 29, 2006 16:55:31 GMT -5
1...Start pSX
2...Click Configuration
3...Click the BIOS tab.
4...See for yourself!
Here's a hint: This is the same file that PCSX2 uses. However, for PCSX2, it must be named ROM0.bin.
I hope I didn't break any rules with this post. I hope not since this is all publically available information anyway.
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Post by Truth Unknown on Apr 29, 2006 22:26:30 GMT -5
It doesn't really matter what name the file is, aslong as the data is still there. It could be named cheese and it whould still work.
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Post by patrickp on Apr 30, 2006 12:44:17 GMT -5
Hmmm. Would it have to be cheese.bin? ;-D
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Post by deftonesrule on Apr 30, 2006 21:53:08 GMT -5
just asking so i know what to hunt for =) wink wink. btw it wsa for pcsx2 .9, the new version. its plays a few commercial games but only like 10% compatibility so far i think
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Post by patrickp on May 1, 2006 6:29:24 GMT -5
Very slowly, as well, I understand - even on fast machines. ;-(
Anyway, what's wrong with google? I just did, and found a few lists of PS2 BIOSs.
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Post by Truth Unknown on May 1, 2006 8:57:09 GMT -5
Well, any BIOS you can Dig Up by a search engine should work. I tried a few weeks ago, with PCSX. My Comp got 5 FPs in the PS2 bios.
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Post by yerlanthien on May 1, 2006 9:40:06 GMT -5
Currently PCSX2 is insanely cpu-reliant to get any results to show...
The only real way to get decent FPS (at this time is like 20+ and normaly PS2 games are 30fps gameplay/60fps menus) give or take depending on the game.
So to get like 10fps in actual gameplay would be great, given that the major problem with PS2 emulation is the EE chip, that's what is really screwin with everyone's minds. You can think of it as a dualcore/HT processor designed to entirely handle CPU/GPU calculations, not just two streams of CPU.
I'd be surprised if anyone emulates it correctly with a standard processor... then again soon in the future we might have more than one "main processor" in our computers, so maybe it'll be possible within the next year or two. (er... meant a processor solely for the intent of GPU calculations, not just a normal video card GPU for instance.)
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