MAME Roms
Read more about MAME
In computer games, MAME is an acronym for Multiple Arcade Machine Emulator. According to the official MAME website (http://www.mame.net), the first official MAME release (0.1) was released on February 5 1997 by Nicola Salmoria. MAME tries to faithfully emulate as many different arcade machines and games as possible, and has been ported to many different platforms. The X11 port for UNIX-like systems is called XMAME.
MAME's purpose is to preserve gaming history, and to stop vintage games from being lost or forgotten. As of version 0.93 (actually the 137th proper release), released February 27, 2005, MAME now supports 3061 unique games and 5524 actual ROMsets (each game may just have the original or have one or more clones as well - see below) and is growing all the time. However, not all of the games in MAME are playable, about 680 ROMsets are marked as not working in the current version.
How MAME works
MAME is a software program which runs on personal computer hardware, with versions for Windows, Macintosh, and Unix operating systems. MAME itself performs several functions: a CPU emulator, which emulates the CPU of the original arcade machine; an input emulator, which maps the arcade buttons, joysticks, and so on to PC devices; and an emulator for the arcade game display and sound equipment. The only thing missing from MAME is the ROM image, which is the program from the original arcade game which made the game run. When MAME is run, it is running the original game from several years ago - just on different hardware.
Emulation philosophy
The stated aim of the project is to document hardware, and so MAME takes a somewhat purist view of emulation, prohibiting cheap hacks that might make a game run properly or run faster at the expense of emulation accuracy. In MAME every emulated component is replicated down to the smallest level of individual registers and instructions. Consequently, MAME emulation is very accurate (in many cases pixel- and sample-accurate), but system requirements can be high. Since MAME runs mostly older games, Moore's Law ensures that a large majority of the games run well on a "midpoint" 2 GHz PC. More modern arcade machines are based around fast pipelined RISC processors, math DSPs, and other devices which are difficult to emulate efficiently. These systems may not run quickly even on the most modern systems available. It's a common assumption that the speed problem is due to these games' use of 3D graphics. MAME does not use hardware rasterization on 3D games because you can't guarantee identical output between different brands of cards, or even revisions of drivers on the same card. Consistency of output across platforms is very important to the MAME team - the Macintosh and Unix/Linux ports are just as important as Windows. Detractors to this philosophy point out that ports that make use of proprietary display routines already exist (e.g MAME32, which uses DirectDraw) and that support of hardware 3D acceleration through OpenGL ought to be added as an option that users can activate or deactivate according to personal preference.
MAME's purpose is to preserve gaming history, and to stop vintage games from being lost or forgotten. As of version 0.93 (actually the 137th proper release), released February 27, 2005, MAME now supports 3061 unique games and 5524 actual ROMsets (each game may just have the original or have one or more clones as well - see below) and is growing all the time. However, not all of the games in MAME are playable, about 680 ROMsets are marked as not working in the current version.
How MAME works
MAME is a software program which runs on personal computer hardware, with versions for Windows, Macintosh, and Unix operating systems. MAME itself performs several functions: a CPU emulator, which emulates the CPU of the original arcade machine; an input emulator, which maps the arcade buttons, joysticks, and so on to PC devices; and an emulator for the arcade game display and sound equipment. The only thing missing from MAME is the ROM image, which is the program from the original arcade game which made the game run. When MAME is run, it is running the original game from several years ago - just on different hardware.
Emulation philosophy
The stated aim of the project is to document hardware, and so MAME takes a somewhat purist view of emulation, prohibiting cheap hacks that might make a game run properly or run faster at the expense of emulation accuracy. In MAME every emulated component is replicated down to the smallest level of individual registers and instructions. Consequently, MAME emulation is very accurate (in many cases pixel- and sample-accurate), but system requirements can be high. Since MAME runs mostly older games, Moore's Law ensures that a large majority of the games run well on a "midpoint" 2 GHz PC. More modern arcade machines are based around fast pipelined RISC processors, math DSPs, and other devices which are difficult to emulate efficiently. These systems may not run quickly even on the most modern systems available. It's a common assumption that the speed problem is due to these games' use of 3D graphics. MAME does not use hardware rasterization on 3D games because you can't guarantee identical output between different brands of cards, or even revisions of drivers on the same card. Consistency of output across platforms is very important to the MAME team - the Macintosh and Unix/Linux ports are just as important as Windows. Detractors to this philosophy point out that ports that make use of proprietary display routines already exist (e.g MAME32, which uses DirectDraw) and that support of hardware 3D acceleration through OpenGL ought to be added as an option that users can activate or deactivate according to personal preference.
# | A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z | All
Some titles on the list might not have a download link available. This is because these specific titles are ESA protected. We cannot offer any downloads for games that fall under ESA protection, thank you for understanding.
- R-Shark
- R-Type (Japan prototype)
- R-Type (Japan)
- R-Type (US)
- R-Type (World)
- R-Type II
- R-Type II (Japan)
- R-Type Leo (Japan)
- R-Type Leo (World)
- R.C. Pro-Am (PlayChoice-10)
- R2D Tank
- Rabbit
- Rabbit Punch (US)
- Rabio Lepus (Japan)
- Raccoon World
- Race Drivin' (cockpit, British, rev 1)
- Race Drivin' (cockpit, British, rev 4)
- Race Drivin' (cockpit, British, rev 5)
- Race Drivin' (cockpit, German, rev 2)
- Race Drivin' (cockpit, German, rev 4)
- Race Drivin' (cockpit, German, rev 5)
- Race Drivin' (cockpit, rev 1)
- Race Drivin' (cockpit, rev 2)
- Race Drivin' (cockpit, rev 3)
- Race Drivin' (cockpit, rev 4)
- Race Drivin' (cockpit, rev 5)
- Race Drivin' (compact, British, rev 4)
- Race Drivin' (compact, British, rev 5)
- Race Drivin' (compact, German, rev 4)
- Race Drivin' (compact, German, rev 5)
- Race Drivin' (compact, rev 1)
- Race Drivin' (compact, rev 2)
- Race Drivin' (compact, rev 4)
- Race Drivin' (compact, rev 5)
- Racin' Force (ver EAC)
- Racin' Force (ver UAB)
- Racing Beat (World)
- Racing Hero (FD1094 317-0144)
- Racing Jam
- Racing Jam: Chapter 2
- Rack 'em Up
- Rack + Roll
- Rad Action
- Rad Mobile (US)
- Rad Mobile (World)
- Rad Racer (PlayChoice-10)
- Rad Racer II (PlayChoice-10)
- Rad Rally (US)
- Rad Rally (World)
- Radar Scope
- Radar Zone
- Radar Zone (Rev.1)
- Radar Zone (Tuni)
- Radiant Silvergun (JUET 980523 V1.000)
- Radical Radial
- Radikal Bikers
- Rafflesia (315-5162)
- Rage of the Dragons
- Ragnagard / Shin-Oh-Ken
- Raiden
- Raiden (Alternate Hardware)
- Raiden (Korea)
- Raiden (Taiwan)
- Raiden 2 (easier?)
- Raiden 2 (set 1, US Fabtek)
- Raiden 2 (set 2, Metrotainment)
- Raiden 2 (set 3, Japan)
- Raiden 2 (set 4, Japan)
- Raiden DX (Japan)
- Raiden DX (Metrotainment license)
- Raiden DX (set 1)
- Raiden DX (set 2)
- Raiden DX (set 3, Newer V33 PCB)
- Raiden Fighters (Australia)
- Raiden Fighters (Dream Island Co. license)
- Raiden Fighters (Japan set 1)
- Raiden Fighters (Japan set 2)
- Raiden Fighters (US)
- Raiden Fighters 2
- Raiden Fighters 2 (Asia, Dream Island license, SPI)
- Raiden Fighters 2 (Asia, Metrotainment license, SPI)
- Raiden Fighters 2 (Japan, SPI)
- Raiden Fighters 2 - 2000 (China)
- Raiden Fighters 2.1 (US, Single Board)
- Raiden Fighters Jet
- Raiden Fighters Jet (Asia)
- Raiden Fighters Jet (Japan)
- Raiden Fighters Jet (US)
- Raiden Fighters Jet (US, Single Board)
- Raiders
- Raiders5
- Raiders5 (Japan)
- Raiga - Strato Fighter (Japan)
- Raiga - Strato Fighter (US)
- Rail Chase (Japan)
- Raimais (Japan)
- Raimais (World)
- Rainbow Islands (Extra)
- Rainbow Islands (new version)
- Rainbow Islands (old version)
- Rally Bike / Dash Yarou
- Rally X
- Rally X (Midway)
- Rallys (bootleg?)
- Rambo III (Europe set 1)
- Rambo III (Europe set 2)
- Rambo III (US)
- Rampage (revision 2)
- Rampage (revision 3)
- Rampage: World Tour (rev 1.1)
- Rampage: World Tour (rev 1.3)
- Rampart (Japan, Joystick)
- Rampart (Joystick)
- Rampart (Trackball)
- Rapid Hero (Japan?)
- Rastan (US set 1)
- Rastan (US set 2)
- Rastan (World)
- Rastan Saga (Japan Rev 1)
- Rastan Saga (Japan)
- Rastan Saga 2 (Japan)
- Rave Racer (Rev. RV1 Ver.B, Japan)
- Rave Racer (Rev. RV1, Japan)
- Rave Racer (Rev. RV2, World)
- Ray Force (Ver 2.3A 1994/01/20)
- Ray Force (Ver 2.3J 1994/01/20)
- Ray Storm (Ver 2.05J)
- Ray Storm (Ver 2.06A)
- Razzmatazz
- Reactor
- Reaktor (Track & Field Conversion)
- Real and Fake / Photo Y2K (ver. 102, Japan Board)
- Real Battle Mahjong King
- Real Bout Fatal Fury / Real Bout Garou Densetsu
- Real Bout Fatal Fury 2 - The Newcomers (Korean release)
- Real Bout Fatal Fury 2 - The Newcomers / Real Bout Garou Densetsu 2 - the newcomers (set 1)
- Real Bout Fatal Fury 2 - The Newcomers / Real Bout Garou Densetsu 2 - the newcomers (set 2)
- Real Bout Fatal Fury Special / Real Bout Garou Densetsu Special
- Real Mahjong Haihai (Japan)
- Real Mahjong Haihai Jinji Idou Hen (Japan)
- Real Mahjong Haihai Seichouhen (Japan)
- Real Mahjong Haihai [BET] (Japan)
- Rebus
- Recalhorn (Ver 1.42J 1994/5/11) (Prototype)
- Recordbreaker (World)
- Red Alert
- Red Baron
- Red Clash (Kaneko)
- Red Clash (set 1)
- Red Clash (set 2)
- Red Corsair
- Red Hawk (bootleg)
- Red Hawk (US)
- Red Robin
- Redline Racer (2 players)
- Reel Fun (Version 7.01)
- Regulus (315-5033, New Ver.)
- Regulus (315-5033, Old Ver.)
- Regulus (not encrypted)
- Reikai Doushi (Japan)
- Relief Pitcher (set 1)
- Relief Pitcher (set 2)
- Renegade (US)
- Renju Kizoku
- Repulse
- Rescue
- Rescue Raider
- Rescue Raider (stand-alone)
- Rettou Juudan Nekkyoku Janshi - Higashi Nippon Hen (Japan)
- Return of the Invaders
- Return of the Invaders (bootleg set 1)
- Return of the Invaders (bootleg set 2)
- Return of the Jedi
- Revenger
- Revolution X (Rev. 1.0 6/16/94)
- Rezon
- Rezon (Taito)
- Ribbit!
- Riddle of Pythagoras (Japan)
- Ridge Racer (Rev. RR1, Japan)
- Ridge Racer (Rev. RR2, World)
- Ridge Racer 2 (Rev. RRS1, Japan)
- Ridge Racer 2 (Rev. RRS1, Ver.B, Japan)
- Ridge Racer 2 (Rev. RRS2, US)
- Riding Fight (Ver 1.0A)
- Riding Fight (Ver 1.0J)
- Riding Fight (Ver 1.0O)
- Riding Hero (set 1)
- Riding Hero (set 2)
- Rim Rockin' Basketball (V1.2)
- Rim Rockin' Basketball (V1.6)
- Rim Rockin' Basketball (V2.0)
- Rim Rockin' Basketball (V2.2)
- Ring Fighter (set 1)
- Ring Fighter (set 2)
- Ring King (US set 1)
- Ring King (US set 2)
- Ring King (US set 3)
- Ring King (US, Woodplace license)
- Ring no Ohja (Japan 2 Players ver. N)
- Ring of Destruction: Slammasters II (Euro 940902)
- Ring Rage (Ver 2.3A 1992/08/09)
- Ring Rage (Ver 2.3J 1992/08/09)
- Ring Rage (Ver 2.3O 1992/08/09)
- Riot
- Riot City (Japan)
- Rip Cord
- Rip Off
- Ripper Ribbit (Version 2.8.4)
- Risky Challenge
- Rival Schools (ASIA 971117)
- Rival Schools (USA 971117)
- River Patrol (bootleg)
- River Patrol (Orca)
- Road Blasters (cockpit, German, rev 1)
- Road Blasters (cockpit, rev 1)
- Road Blasters (cockpit, rev 2)
- Road Blasters (upright, German, rev 1)
- Road Blasters (upright, German, rev 2)
- Road Blasters (upright, German, rev 3)
- Road Blasters (upright, rev 1)
- Road Blasters (upright, rev 2)
- Road Blasters (upright, rev 3)
- Road Blasters (upright, rev 4)
- Road Burners
- Road Fighter (set 1)
- Road Fighter (set 2)
- Road Riot 4WD
- Road Riot's Revenge (prototype alt)
- Road Riot's Revenge (prototype)
- Road Runner (rev 1)
- Road Runner (rev 2)
- Roads Edge / Round Trip (rev.B)
- RoadWars (Arcadia, V 2.3)
- Robby Roto
- Robo Army (set 1)
- Robo Army (set 2)
- Robo Wres 2001
- Robo Wres 2001 (bootleg)
- Robocop (Japan)
- Robocop (US revision 0)
- Robocop (US revision 1)
- Robocop (World bootleg)
- Robocop (World revision 3)
- Robocop (World revision 4)
- Robocop 2 (Euro/Asia v0.10)
- Robocop 2 (Japan v0.11)
- Robocop 2 (US v0.05)
- Robocop 3 (Nintendo Super System)
- Robot Bowl
- Robotron (Solid Blue label)
- Robotron (Yellow/Orange label)
- Roc'n Rope
- Roc'n Rope (Kosuka)
- Rock 'n Rage (Prototype?)
- Rock 'n Rage (World?)
- Rock Climber
- Rock Duck (prototype?)
- Rock Tris
- Rock'n 3 (Japan)
- Rock'n 4 (Japan, prototype)
- Rock'n MegaSession (Japan)
- Rock'n Tread (Japan)
- Rock'n Tread (Japan, alternate)
- Rock'n Tread 2 (Japan)
- Rockin' Kats (PlayChoice-10)
- Rockman - The Power Battle (CPS1 Japan 950922)
- Rockman 2: The Power Fighters (Japan 960708)
- Rockman: The Power Battle (CPS2, Japan 950922)
- Rod-Land (Japan bootleg)
- Rod-Land (Japan)
- Rod-Land (World)
- Rohga Armor Force (Asia/Europe v3.0 Set 1)
- Rohga Armor Force (Asia/Europe v3.0 Set 2)
- Rohga Armor Force (Asia/Europe v5.0)
- Rohga Armor Force (Hong Kong v3.0)
- Rohga Armor Force (US v1.0)
- Roller Aces (set 1)
- Roller Aces (set 2)
- Roller Jammer
- Rollergames (Japan)
- Rollergames (US)
- Rolling Crash / Moon Base
- Rolling Thunder (new version)
- Rolling Thunder (old version)
- Rolling Thunder 2
- Rolling Thunder 2 (Japan)
- Romar Triv
- Rompers (Japan old version)
- Rompers (Japan)
- Rong Rong (Europe)
- Rong Rong (Germany)
- Rootin' Tootin' (aka La.Pa.Pa) (Cassette)
- Rootin' Tootin' (Cassette)
- Rotary Fighter
- Rough Racer (Japan, FD1094 317-0058-06b)
- Rough Ranger (v2.0)
- Rougien
- Round Up 5 - Super Delta Force
- Round-Up
- Route 16
- Route 16 (bootleg)
- Route 16 (set 2)
- Route X (bootleg)
- Royal Card (Austria, set 1)
- Royal Card (Austria, set 2)
- Royal Card (Slovakia, encrypted)
- Royal Casino
- Royal Mahjong (Japan)
- Rug Rats
- Run and Gun (ver EAA 1993 10.4)
- Run and Gun (ver EAA 1993 10.8)
- Run and Gun (ver UAB 1993 10.12)
- Run and Gun (ver UBA 1993 10.8)
- Run and Gun 2 (ver UAA)
- Run Deep
- Runark (Japan)
- Runaway (prototype)
- Rush & Crash (Japan)
- Rush'n Attack (PlayChoice-10)
- Rush'n Attack (US)
- Rushing Heroes (ver UAB)
- Rygar (PlayChoice-10)
- Rygar (US set 1)
- Rygar (US set 2)
- Ryu Jin (Japan)
- RyuKyu (Japan, FD1094 317-5023)
- Ryuuha [BET] (Japan 871027)
- Ryuusei Janshi Kirara Star