Sega CD Burning for Console Use
Sega CD Burning for Console Use
I'm trying to burn games to play on my Sega CD. Whenever I burn them they don't run though, I was told to try burning at a slower read speed since the Sega CD couldn't keep up with faster read speeds, so I burned at 1x. Finally got a game to run properly, with sound effects but no actual background music. THEN researching I found that you want to burn .bin/.cue files instead of .isos, but am having a hard time finding sites that offer .bin/.cue, everything I've found has been isos with .mp3s for the music. Any suggestions?
Huge RPG fan.
PSN ID and XBL GamerTag: KoLAddict
PSN ID and XBL GamerTag: KoLAddict
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Pabstblueribbon
- 64-bit
- Posts: 309
- Joined: Thu Feb 04, 2010 3:04 pm
Re: Sega CD Burning for Console Use
http://dcisozone.com has them. Some are bin/cue, some are iso/mp3. Ive never done sega cd burning myself, but this should supply you with what ya need.
Re: Sega CD Burning for Console Use
You can extract the files from isos with winrar or daemon, and then run the sega cue maker to get the cue sheet.
Some other pointers might be to check that the files load and run in Kega and the image has the correct region for your machine
I've heard conflicting stories about burning speeds, most people say that burning as slow as possible produces the best result and others argue that disks are designed and tested at the highest speed and therefore burning at full speed produces the better result. I have no idea which account is true but maybe its worth using a disk at top speed to see if that works any better?
Some other pointers might be to check that the files load and run in Kega and the image has the correct region for your machine
I've heard conflicting stories about burning speeds, most people say that burning as slow as possible produces the best result and others argue that disks are designed and tested at the highest speed and therefore burning at full speed produces the better result. I have no idea which account is true but maybe its worth using a disk at top speed to see if that works any better?