Just wondering how many of you out there have a mame cabinet.
I have always wanted to set one up, but never had the time/space/cash to get it done.
Recently inheareted one when a good friend of mine was lost to cancer.
I am having fun reverse engineering it trying to figure out how everything works
I will post pics later.
FYI: For anyone that has no clue what I am talking about...
MAME stands for Multiple Arcade Machine Emulator. When used in conjunction with an arcade game's data files (ROMs), MAME will more or less faithfully reproduce that game on a PC. MAME can currently emulate over 2600 unique (and over 4600 in total) classic arcade video games from the three decades of video games - '70s, '80s and '90s, and some from the current millennium.
MAME's purpose is to preserve these decades of video-game history. As gaming technology continues to rush forward, MAME prevents these important "vintage" games from being lost and forgotten. This is achieved by documenting the hardware and how it functions, thanks to the talent of programmers from the MAME team and from other contributors. Being able to play the games is just a nice side-effect, which doesn't happen all the time. MAME strives for emulating the games faithfully.
With enough time/cash, you can put a PC running MAME into an arcade cabinet and really re-live the arcade days.