вторник 05 февраляadmin

PS2 Tekken 5 (USA) ISO. A completely new graphics engine delivers the most beautiful fighting game experience on the PS2. System requirements memory card. I run tekken 5 with the ISO file and the game crashes on memory card loading.i disable the memory cards.it crashes again.Oh ***** no *****.no thats happen with the original CD.With the ISO file its even not go to there. Sorry for my wonderfull english pcsx2-beta-1190 Graphics GSdx 1310 SSE2 First and Second Controler LilyPAD 0.9.10 Cdvdrom.

Oshibki man tga na russkom eds full. Something's up with the Sony PlayStation Classic - what should be a celebration of a truly iconic console is compromised by an uneven selection of games, sub-par emulation and the bizarre choice of using a mixture of both NTSC and PAL games in a machine with a locked 60Hz high definition output. The unit certainly looks the part, successfully replicating the look of original hardware but measuring just 47x104x33mm - a mere 45 per cent of the volume of the original machine - and, smaller than the footprint of a PlayStation 4 game case. Download gta san andreas apk data obb. Two replica PlayStation controllers are included - and these are facsimiles of the original controller, meaning digital control input only. This connects to the micro-console via USB.

Powered by a mobile ARM chipset, the PlayStation Classic doesn't require much juice - you can power it using a micro USB phone charger, which is just as well as weirdly, there is no power adapter in the box. This is actually something of an issue as the unit is a little fussy about where it's plugged in - hooking it up to a USB 3.0 port on a PC didn't work, while plugging it into an HDTV was fine. Going into this one, the hope was that the quality of the emulation would be high, as Sony has an excellent history in supporting PlayStation titles on later consoles, debuting its first emulator for the PlayStation Portable (PSP), with further successes on PlayStation 3 and PlayStation Vita. However, it's understood that proprietary emulation developed by Sony itself was used on those systems, while the small print suggests that the PlayStation Classic uses a mobile port of the PCSX emulator instead. Here's how the PlayStation Classic compares with original hardware in terms of form-factor.

A total of 20 games are preloaded on the machine, and this is the complete list. The controversy kicks in when you look at the titles marked with an asterisk: these are the PAL games Sony has added to the mix. • Battle Arena Toshinden* • Cool Boarders 2* • Destruction Derby • Final Fantasy 7 • Grand Theft Auto* • Intelligent Qube • Jumping Flash* • Metal Gear Solid • Mr Driller • Oddworld: Abe's Oddysee • Rayman • Resident Evil Director's Cut • Revelations: Persona • R4 Ridge Racer Type 4 • Super Puzzle Fighter 2 Turbo • Syphon Filter • Tekken 3* • Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six* • Twisted Metal • Wild Arms What's baffling is the inclusion of PAL versions at all, particularly when the vast majority of the PAL titles in this list were actually developed in Japan or the United States. So what's the problem here? Well, these days all console systems run at 60Hz - a format accepted by HDTVs the world over. Back in the day, PAL territories used TVs that ran at 50Hz instead, and the easiest way to 'port' games over to PAL systems was to simply run them more slowly.

Most PAL games run at 83.3 per cent of the full-speed of the NTSC versions in terms of frame-rate, and most of the time in terms of actual gameplay speed too. Side-by-side with the NTSC equivalents, PAL versions are generally slow and plodding and don't properly represent a US or Japanese developer's original vision. Adding to the sense of bafflement is that the North American PlayStation Classic has the same selection of PAL titles, meaning that for the first time, US users will get to experience the slow-motion version of Tekken 3 we had to put up with in Europe. It's bad then - really bad - but it could have been worse. PAL games also tended to feature obtrusive black borders at the top and bottom of the screen (the PAL system does have a higher resolution than NTSC, but it's only rarely utilised) but at least the PlayStation Classic clears this up, resizing the output to full resolution at the proper aspect ratio.:: We've only just started to look at the PlayStation Classic (our unit arrived today) - and it's not a pretty picture right now.