![]() This makes keeping things up to date here easier, and it makes it way easier for the end user to use all of the artwork available.īelow are the Console and PC compilations that we have artwork from today. All of this artwork is now combined into the normal In-Game Artwork files for MAME. After years of growing older (and hopefully wiser), I realized that was just silly. In 2009, after noticing that those screenshots were missing detail, and really wanting to see the full artwork in Namco Museum Virtual Arcade, I did some research after Stiletto pointed me in the right direction, and figured out how to extract the artwork from some of these games.įor too long of a time, this artwork sat on a separate page from the real artwork. ![]() I ended up creating an Other Artwork page to keep stuff that did not fall into real MAME Artwork. This is the first time I remember seeing added artwork to an arcade port.Ībout six months after the Artwork project started, Retro27 sent me some screenshots of a few of the Namco XBLA games, which made for "fun" bezel artwork. It was the first time I had ever seen the home console version of an arcade game look just like the arcade.Ī few years down the road, Namco Museum came out for the original PlayStation. I loved it! Practically perfect ports of Defender, Stargate (well, Defender II), Robotron, Joust, and Sinistar. ![]() The first arcade compilation I ever purchased was Williams Arcade's Greatest Hits for the Super Nintendo. Home of MAME Artwork and other Emulation Goodies
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