Wrong screen ratio, zero scanlines, the list goes on... You know how to build a cab, but have no idea how games have been designed and are meant to be played... What a waste of materials.
@@AndyMakes it’s all about gameplay and fun. I don’t understand why these so called game purists are responding to self build video’s. In their mind Mame is awful and the only thing that matters are the original boards and CRT screens. I’m glad I don’t have such a narrow view on things. Great build!
Your voice is very soothing. And you have very good knowledge of all areas of arcade construction. I wish the video was much longer though. That is a good compliment bro.
This is amazing. The first arcade I ever visited was in our local shopping mall, and directly across from it was a Corn Dog 7 restaurant. I feel like I could smell corn dogs while I watched this.
Great Job! When I built mine I left the PC on my desk nearby and didn't put anything inside the cabinet to reduce any heat, I only had to run 3 cables Sound, Video and 1 usb, It lets me work on the sorftware installs and trouble shooting sitting at the desk, and I can use the PC for sit down games and other PC related tasks. 1 less PC purchase as well :)
That is a great idea! I had slowly built up a spare parts bin as I upgraded my PC and ended up with enough old parts to build a second one. Without that though, keeping the PC at your desk lets it serve dual purpose and saves a ton of money on the build.
I can't argue with that, as much as I tried making it easy to access and adding cooling vents, it's still going to struggle vs a PC on the outside, and you still have to crawl down there to unplug for servicing.
Thank you! This was my old gaming PC so it was a little overkill for the games it's running: GPU: EVGA 760 GTX CPU: i7-990X MB: EVGA X58 RAM: 16gb DDR3 HDD: 500GB WD Green I used these because I already had them, you could use far cheaper parts and have no performance loss for anything Dreamcast quality and under.
Of course! I've updated the description with the links to the products I bought. The original panels I bought are no longer on sale but the company that makes the controller makes the panels now too, hopefully those won't require any soldering like mine did and will be straight plug and play! The LED Controller comes with a very basic wiring chart, you can probably see it on the amazon listing (basically sending power to both the Controller and LED panels, then sending data from the controller to the panels.) It also comes with an SD card that has the software you use to add the animations as well as where you select the orientation of your panels and how the animation will display. It's been a while since I messed with it so the information is not fresh in my mind but I'll take a look at what I did just in case you have more questions!
Awesome work. Beyond my ability at the moment due to my Neurological Disorder. Luv your markee animation. So.... Gif or Jif... I would say the best way to pronounce it is... BLISS 😊😊😊
Thank you! I'm happy you're still able to find moments of bliss! Hopefully your positive attitude leads to improvements so you can do more of what you love! I have MS (but I've been in remission for a while thankfully) I know just how strongly emotions can affect you for better or worse.
@@AndyMakes thank you for the kind words. I have FND (FUNCTIONAL NEUROLOGICAL DISORDER), Neuropathy, anxiety, depression, & ptsd. Used to work at a recumbent trike shop but due to my limitations, they let me go. I specialized in working with those that were MS, Stroke, & CP survivors. I miss work but since I sometimes can't feel the tool in my hand, it gets frustrating. I try to look past the things that try to limit me and stay as positive as possible. Watching videos like this one brings enjoyment. Thank you once again for sharing with us.