Leiti 4 vastet.
| ID | Kanal | Video | Kustutatud | Kuupäev | Kirjeldus | Subtiitrid | Avalik | Ülekanne | HD | URL | PRIVATE | TitleMUI_en | TitleMUI_et | KirjeldusMUI_en | KirjeldusMUI_et | Filename | Category | CategoryMUI_en | Tags | OdyseeURL | KanalMUI_en | KanalMUI_et | Translated | has_thumbnail | local_stream | ytdlp_meta | est_subs | eng_subs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 655 | Press any key to continue... | Tacoma Moment [GT2 A-Spec Replay] | 0 | 2025-11-13 | I was just casually playing Gran Turismo 2. A-Spec mod until this race happened. This is one of the silliest GT2 replays I've recorded. And yes, I won this race. | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JDx7KdSOoOE | 0 | Tacoma Moment [GT2 A-Spec Replay] | Tacoma Moment [GT2 A-Spec Replay] | I was just casually playing Gran Turismo 2. A-Spec mod until this race happened. This is one of the silliest GT2 replays I've recorded. And yes, I won this race. | I was just casually playing Gran Turismo 2. A-Spec mod until this race happened. This is one of the silliest GT2 replays I've recorded. And yes, I won this race. | tacoma.mp4 | Muud mängimise videod | Other gameplay videos | Gran Turismo 2,A-Spec,mod,PlayStation,PSX,DuckStation,emulator,60 FPS | N/A | Press any key to continue... | Press any key to continue... | 0 | /channel_db_lite/web/thumbs/655.jpg | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| 653 | Press any key to continue... | PlayStation Startup Sound [PSX VAB/SEQ to SF2/MID conversion (attempt)] | 0 | 2025-10-28 | I made a tool to extract the PlayStation startup sound from a memory dump. It maybe possible to get it from the BIOS ROM directly, but since the sequences and VAB header are compressed, I just did it the cheap way with a memory dump. Link: https://github.com/MarkusMaal/psxbios2mid/ As you may be able to hear, the conversion is not 100% accurate. The soundfont is just a regular .VAB (used by a LOT of PSX games), which is easy enough to convert, but the sequences themselves are actually using a custom MIDI-like format proprietary to the PSX BIOS ROM, which I've reverse engineered the binary structure of myself (you can also get the ImHex patterns from the repository above). However, actually creating MIDI files from scratch is kind of difficult and this is the best I've managed so far. The startup sound consists of three parts: boot, transition and ending. There is no specific sequence for the transition part, so I assume the BIOS is hard-coded to play that sound at a specific pitch and velocity. Chapters: 0:00 Part 1 (no disc/boot) 0:27 Part 2 (reverse glass break) 0:34 Part 3 (license screen) 0:49 Bonus stuff MIDI player: Spessasynth |
0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WiEVB50rMkU | 0 | PlayStation Startup Sound [PSX VAB/SEQ to SF2/MID conversion (attempt)] | PlayStation Startup Sound [PSX VAB/SEQ to SF2/MID conversion (attempt)] | I made a tool to extract the PlayStation startup sound from a memory dump. It maybe possible to get it from the BIOS ROM directly, but since the sequences and VAB header are compressed, I just did it the cheap way with a memory dump. Link: https://github.com/MarkusMaal/psxbios2mid/ As you may be able to hear, the conversion is not 100% accurate. The soundfont is just a regular .VAB (used by a LOT of PSX games), which is easy enough to convert, but the sequences themselves are actually using a custom MIDI-like format proprietary to the PSX BIOS ROM, which I've reverse engineered the binary structure of myself (you can also get the ImHex patterns from the repository above). However, actually creating MIDI files from scratch is kind of difficult and this is the best I've managed so far. The startup sound consists of three parts: boot, transition and ending. There is no specific sequence for the transition part, so I assume the BIOS is hard-coded to play that sound at a specific pitch and velocity. Chapters: 0:00 Part 1 (no disc/boot) 0:27 Part 2 (reverse glass break) 0:34 Part 3 (license screen) 0:49 Bonus stuff MIDI player: Spessasynth |
I made a tool to extract the PlayStation startup sound from a memory dump. It maybe possible to get it from the BIOS ROM directly, but since the sequences and VAB header are compressed, I just did it the cheap way with a memory dump. Link: https://github.com/MarkusMaal/psxbios2mid/ As you may be able to hear, the conversion is not 100% accurate. The soundfont is just a regular .VAB (used by a LOT of PSX games), which is easy enough to convert, but the sequences themselves are actually using a custom MIDI-like format proprietary to the PSX BIOS ROM, which I've reverse engineered the binary structure of myself (you can also get the ImHex patterns from the repository above). However, actually creating MIDI files from scratch is kind of difficult and this is the best I've managed so far. The startup sound consists of three parts: boot, transition and ending. There is no specific sequence for the transition part, so I assume the BIOS is hard-coded to play that sound at a specific pitch and velocity. Chapters: 0:00 Part 1 (no disc/boot) 0:27 Part 2 (reverse glass break) 0:34 Part 3 (license screen) 0:49 Bonus stuff MIDI player: Spessasynth |
psxbios2mid.mov | Videomängude analüüs | Video game analysis | N/A | Press any key to continue... | Press any key to continue... | 0 | /channel_db_lite/web/thumbs/653.jpg | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | |
| 651 | Press any key to continue... | PlayStation 2 - BIOS soundtrack [PS2 BGM Rip] | 0 | 2025-10-21 | Ambient sounds from the PS2 BIOS. Short sound effects (less than 5 seconds) are not included here. These sounds seem to be using this sound format: https://psx-spx.consoledev.net/cdromfileformats/#sq-hd-hd-sssqsshd (used by some first-party Sony PS1/PS2 games as well) The HD/BD/SQ files are embedded directly inside the BIOS ROM (in compressed form). I have actually managed to partially convert these into a soundfont and MIDI files, you can listen to an example here, but I couldn't convert accurate ADSR yet, so it doesn't sound exactly the same: http://paktc.markusmaal.ee/redscreen.zip However, in this video, I have instead opted to trick the PlayStation 2 into playing these sounds, which was easier to pull off and it is 100% accurate. Chapters: 0:00 Startup sound 0:18 Startup woosh (played immediately after startup sound when no disc is inserted) 0:27 Main menu ambiance (played on the main menu/system configuration screens) 5:27 Unknown (maybe a part of another sound?) 5:33 Short woosh (played after startup sound when a game disc is inserted) 5:39 Red screen of death (plays when you insert an invalid disc) 10:40 RSOD variant (might be an unused sound?) P.S. If you are the first person who can figure out the exact time of day I recorded this based on the flying orbs, I'll pin your comment. |
0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hf2L-3Ef9Pg | 0 | PlayStation 2 - BIOS soundtrack [PS2 BGM Rip] | PlayStation 2 - BIOS soundtrack [PS2 BGM Rip] | Ambient sounds from the PS2 BIOS. Short sound effects (less than 5 seconds) are not included here. These sounds seem to be using this sound format: https://psx-spx.consoledev.net/cdromfileformats/#sq-hd-hd-sssqsshd (used by some first-party Sony PS1/PS2 games as well) The HD/BD/SQ files are embedded directly inside the BIOS ROM (in compressed form). I have actually managed to partially convert these into a soundfont and MIDI files, you can listen to an example here, but I couldn't convert accurate ADSR yet, so it doesn't sound exactly the same: http://paktc.markusmaal.ee/redscreen.zip However, in this video, I have instead opted to trick the PlayStation 2 into playing these sounds, which was easier to pull off and it is 100% accurate. Chapters: 0:00 Startup sound 0:18 Startup woosh (played immediately after startup sound when no disc is inserted) 0:27 Main menu ambiance (played on the main menu/system configuration screens) 5:27 Unknown (maybe a part of another sound?) 5:33 Short woosh (played after startup sound when a game disc is inserted) 5:39 Red screen of death (plays when you insert an invalid disc) 10:40 RSOD variant (might be an unused sound?) P.S. If you are the first person who can figure out the exact time of day I recorded this based on the flying orbs, I'll pin your comment. |
Ambient sounds from the PS2 BIOS. Short sound effects (less than 5 seconds) are not included here. These sounds seem to be using this sound format: https://psx-spx.consoledev.net/cdromfileformats/#sq-hd-hd-sssqsshd (used by some first-party Sony PS1/PS2 games as well) The HD/BD/SQ files are embedded directly inside the BIOS ROM (in compressed form). I have actually managed to partially convert these into a soundfont and MIDI files, you can listen to an example here, but I couldn't convert accurate ADSR yet, so it doesn't sound exactly the same: http://paktc.markusmaal.ee/redscreen.zip However, in this video, I have instead opted to trick the PlayStation 2 into playing these sounds, which was easier to pull off and it is 100% accurate. Chapters: 0:00 Startup sound 0:18 Startup woosh (played immediately after startup sound when no disc is inserted) 0:27 Main menu ambiance (played on the main menu/system configuration screens) 5:27 Unknown (maybe a part of another sound?) 5:33 Short woosh (played after startup sound when a game disc is inserted) 5:39 Red screen of death (plays when you insert an invalid disc) 10:40 RSOD variant (might be an unused sound?) P.S. If you are the first person who can figure out the exact time of day I recorded this based on the flying orbs, I'll pin your comment. |
ps2bios.mp4 | Varia | Miscellaneous | PlayStation 2,BIOS,Sony,startup sound,red screen of death,RSOD,red screen,Please insert PlayStation or PlayStation 2 format disc,Please insert PlayStation CD-ROM | N/A | Press any key to continue... | Press any key to continue... | 0 | /channel_db_lite/web/thumbs/651.jpg | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| 643 | Press any key to continue... | MENU_1.MID [JAM to SF2 conversion (attempt)] | 0 | 2025-09-09 | This is my attempt to convert Flipnic's audiobank files (.HD/.BD) to SF2 format, which is a standard file format for MIDI soundfonts. The menu music sounds ALMOST correct, except there is absolutely no reverb, some samples cut off randomly and a few instruments have incorrect fine-tune pitch (basically all of this except for the lack of reverb can probably be fixed). This voice bank file format is actually used in other games too, such as Ape Escape, Gran Turismo 4 (.INS files), Omega Boost, Wild Arms 2 etc. You can read about the file format here: https://psx-spx.consoledev.net/cdromfileformats/#cdrom-file-audio-other-formats (basically identical in Flipnic, except embedded SSsq is Data 5, not Data 4 and it uses standard .MID files instead of .SQ files). I also created a ImHex pattern for this file format: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/MarkusMaal/FlipnicPatterns/refs/heads/main/patterns/hd.hexpat The tool to do this (FlipnicFileTools 2.1) is still in development, there's some technical non-sense I still have yet to figure out, but you can get the open source code in the current state here: https://github.com/MarkusMaal/FlipnicFileTools (release version does not contain the SF2 conversion option) MIDI editor used for the video: https://signalmidi.app |
0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DFfbDm0tMNE | 0 | MENU_1.MID [JAM to SF2 conversion (attempt)] | MENU_1.MID [JAM to SF2 conversion (attempt)] | This is my attempt to convert Flipnic's audiobank files (.HD/.BD) to SF2 format, which is a standard file format for MIDI soundfonts. The menu music sounds ALMOST correct, except there is absolutely no reverb, some samples cut off randomly and a few instruments have incorrect fine-tune pitch (basically all of this except for the lack of reverb can probably be fixed). This voice bank file format is actually used in other games too, such as Ape Escape, Gran Turismo 4 (.INS files), Omega Boost, Wild Arms 2 etc. You can read about the file format here: https://psx-spx.consoledev.net/cdromfileformats/#cdrom-file-audio-other-formats (basically identical in Flipnic, except embedded SSsq is Data 5, not Data 4 and it uses standard .MID files instead of .SQ files). I also created a ImHex pattern for this file format: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/MarkusMaal/FlipnicPatterns/refs/heads/main/patterns/hd.hexpat The tool to do this (FlipnicFileTools 2.1) is still in development, there's some technical non-sense I still have yet to figure out, but you can get the open source code in the current state here: https://github.com/MarkusMaal/FlipnicFileTools (release version does not contain the SF2 conversion option) MIDI editor used for the video: https://signalmidi.app |
This is my attempt to convert Flipnic's audiobank files (.HD/.BD) to SF2 format, which is a standard file format for MIDI soundfonts. The menu music sounds ALMOST correct, except there is absolutely no reverb, some samples cut off randomly and a few instruments have incorrect fine-tune pitch (basically all of this except for the lack of reverb can probably be fixed). This voice bank file format is actually used in other games too, such as Ape Escape, Gran Turismo 4 (.INS files), Omega Boost, Wild Arms 2 etc. You can read about the file format here: https://psx-spx.consoledev.net/cdromfileformats/#cdrom-file-audio-other-formats (basically identical in Flipnic, except embedded SSsq is Data 5, not Data 4 and it uses standard .MID files instead of .SQ files). I also created a ImHex pattern for this file format: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/MarkusMaal/FlipnicPatterns/refs/heads/main/patterns/hd.hexpat The tool to do this (FlipnicFileTools 2.1) is still in development, there's some technical non-sense I still have yet to figure out, but you can get the open source code in the current state here: https://github.com/MarkusMaal/FlipnicFileTools (release version does not contain the SF2 conversion option) MIDI editor used for the video: https://signalmidi.app |
2025-09-09 00-47-08.mp4 | Videomängude analüüs | Video game analysis | N/A | Press any key to continue... | Press any key to continue... | 0 | /channel_db_lite/web/thumbs/643.jpg | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |