I was curious so I FTP'd over my PS1 PSN games and Ive been trying to extract the iso's. Connect FTP and get the EBOOT.PBP File from the psx games directory. Open the EBOOT.PBP of Resident Evil and extract all of the files to a folder and name it Resident Evil. To play PSX on PSP place eboot files you have downloaded on to a Memory. To Create image file from disc or extract disc, choose a title for PS1 game and press start. Run POPStation and browse for the iso bin file that is ripped from the.
ISOs » PSX on PSP » T » Tekken 3 (USA)
PSX on PSP / PSX2PSP eBoot ISOs
Genre: ActionFighting Rating: ESRB: T, PEGI: 12+ How to Play this Game ?
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Game Description & Reviews:
OverviewTekken 3 is the critically acclaimed third installment in the Tekken fighting game series.
bro3886_ml rates this game: 5/5
Tekken 3 is the third game in the Tekken series of fighting genre by namco. This game was originally released in Playstation in the year 2008. Though there are number of additional installments added and still upcoming to the series, Tekken 3 still has its charisma unscathed, it is still considered to be the best among its stablemates. Anyone who had been interested in games in the early 2000s couldn't have missed this wonderful game, for it was the best in its time, and still is and proves to be great among many in its genre.
This game has a total of 24 characters with 10 of them selectable at first including Jin Kazama, Lei Wulong, Nina Williams, Paul Phoenix, Yoshimitsu, King(or Armour King as alternate costume), Ling Xiaoyu, Hwoarang, Eddy Gordo, Forest Law. The remaining could be unlocked as different characters are used to complete the Arcade and other modes.
The game features many game modes apart from the general Arcade for single player combat with story line clip at the end of ten stages and Versus mode for two players, like the Tekken Force mode which involves a character selection and fighting along an area with horizontal side-scroll movement, just like Bareknuckle or TMNT beat-em-up games in 16 bit, but in 3d. There is also a Tekken Ball mode which could be unlocked, where upto two players could select characters and hit a ball just like volleyball on a beach and a Team Battle which again can be played by two players, wherein a team of characters could be selected to fight.
This game is the best in the Playstation and promises a good entertainment for hours or even days, with a lots of things to explore.
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Download Tekken 3 (USA)(478M)
Note: This game is a PSX2PSP eBoot and is meant to be played on a Sony PSP. If you are looking for a PSX/PS1 ISO to play on an emulator or console then please check our Sony Playstation ISOs Section.
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1Cartridge-based (Up to 4th Gen)
1.2Ripping From Emulated Releases
2Sony PlayStation 1/2
2.2Ripping From Emulated Releases
4GameCube/Wii
6Nintendo Game Boy Advance / DS / 3DS
7Sony Playstation Portable / Playstation Vita
8See Also
8.1Converting PS1 ISOs to PSP Eboots
Cartridge-based (Up to 4th Gen)[edit]
Games on Nintendo's NES, SNES, GB and N64, Sega's Master System and Mega Drive (aka Genesis), NEC's PC-Engine (aka TG-16), and other systems from the same era were stored on special cartridges to be read with a very particular pin layout only found on their intended hardware.
With Special Hardware[edit]
Special hardware dumping the cartridge contents to a more digital-friendly binary form has been made for older consoles. However, these pieces of hardware have been going out of print recently.
Kazzo: for the NES.
Retrode: for the SNES and Sega Mega Drive. Third-party physical plug-ins add more systems, including the GB, GBA, N64, VB; Sega's Master System, Pico; NEC's PC-Engine; Atari 2600 and more. An NES add-on was said to be under development.
Bear in mind that when trying to dump cartridge games, there's a significant risk of having corrupt sectors in the resulting dump. If you're using your DIY adapters but don't know what you are doing, there's a risk of damaging the original cartridge due to out-of-spec voltages.
Newer systems using game cards such as the DS and 3DS have other solutions relying either on recent dedicated hardware, or homebrew under a compromised system.
Ripping From Emulated Releases[edit]
Sometimes the companies re-release the games digitally, as a wrapper containing an emulator and the ROM. Depending on the company, the ROM may or may not be directly playable in regular emulators. You can extract those ROMs and play them without having to go to shady sites nor tracking expensive cartridges and potentially breaking them in the ripping process. And you get to support the company who made the stuff you love, instead of resellers hoarding second-hand game copies or random, less-reputable ROM sites other than those trusted by the community. That being said, emulated re-releases may contain changes due to licensing or censorship issues amongst other things.
Virtual Console (Wii, Wii U, 3DS)[edit]
The Wii VC releases are most of the time ready to work in emulators. In fact, Nintendo was so kind they even included the iNES headers in NES ROMs (16 bytes at the beginning of the ROM that are not part of the original cart data yet the emulator needs them to know which mapper it is and run the game at all). You can even replace the ROM with one from the same system from your choice, and get it to run if Nintendo's emulators are compatible. The discovery of iNES headers in VC releases led to a rumour wherein Nintendo, or at least those whom Nintendo subcontracted for the re-releases, merely downloaded their own games off a ROM site, though while both the VC release of Super Mario Bros. and pirated copies of it do share the same checksum (and are thus identical), it might be just a coincidence, and knowing Nintendo they will certainly deny any such accusations of pirating their own games.
Some Virtual Console versions have been enhanced or modified compared to the original release.
While some just modify the ROM directly (like Monster World IV's English translation), other modifications rely on real-time patching by patch files included with the ROM (like Romancing SaGa 2's extra dungeons). The anti-seizure effects and texture enhancements are most of the time tied to the VC emulator.
Also, Super Nintendo ROMs have their SPC sound data blanked in the ROM and stored in a separate file, meaning the ROM dump is incomplete for these. And you might need a byte swapper tool for N64 games.
For Wii VC:
Get ShowMiiWads.exe and select 'I accept and take the risk of WAD editing features'. Go to Tools/Create Common-Key and type in the text it asks you for.
You need a wad file of the VC app.
If you don't have a wad file yet, you can get it from a NAND dump extracted off your Wii with dedicated homebrew apps (changing it and reinserting it in the Wii could be dangerous if you don't know what are you doing, that was what the disclaimer was for, it's not relevant here though). In ShowMiiWads, click Options/Change NAND Backup Path, then click View/ShowMiiNand, and then on the file with the name of the game right-click and click Pack Wad. Then click View/ShowMiiNand again.
Now that you have the wad file, go to File/Open Folder and where the wad file is.
Right-click, Extract/To Folder.
You go to the newly created folder, and you'll find lots of files. Chances are the biggest 'app' file has the emulator and ROM data. It's usually '00000005.app' for MSX/GEN/N64 roms. In the utility, load it and click Tools/Unpack U8 Archive.
Congrats! You should have the ROM somewhere in there. Check the file sizes and name for hints and find out which one it is, it's part of the fun.
However! Some post-2010 ROMs give inside another compressed 'romc' file. That's the ROM, but compressed. You'll need the romc command-line decompression tool, following the commands: cd C:/romfolder/ romc d C:/romfolder/romc C:/extractionfolder/customromname.extension
Here is how to dump GBA images off Wii U's VC and unscramble the resulting ROM images to something playable on emulators.
Various Compilations[edit]
Sega Ages - MD
Sega Mega Collection (multiple systems) - MD
Sega I Love Mickey Mouse (Saturn) - MD - ROM divided
Animal Crossing GC - NES/SNES
Zelda Collector Disk GC - NES/N64 (includes 60Hz PAL OoT/MQ/MM versions)
Konami Twinbee Collection - SNES - ROM divided
Rare Replay
Sony PlayStation 1/2[edit]
With A PC's Optical Drive[edit]
Windows: Use ImgBurn
It will ask you to install toolbars and other junk, choose custom installation and deselect them. It does not install them if you say no like other programs.
Put your PS1 or PS2 disc into your computer.
Open ImgBurn
Click Mode>Read
Choose the destination of the file, by clicking the little folder+magnifying glass button.
Click the CD button at the bottom.
Wait for it to finish ripping.
Play ISO in whatever emulator you use
For PS1 games, make sure you rip the disc as a BIN+CUE rather than a single ISO file.
While you can play PS1/PS2 discs directly from your PC's optical drive in some emulators (ePSXe and older mednafen releases for PS1, PCSX2 for PS2) it wears the disc and the optical drive the longer you use it, hence why it's not recommended.
Ripping From Emulated Releases[edit]
Sony made the hard part of game ripping already for you, so why not go for those instead to dump your game images from?
PS Classics (PS1C PSP, PS1C PS3, PS2C PS3)[edit]
Sony also has a digital distribution service for their old PS1 and PS2 games. The selection is limited considering Sony prohibits any kind of modification to the ISO data compared
For PS1 Classics on PSP: Rip the EBOOT.PBP file. It can be directly opened in some emulators like PCSX-R. Its ISO can also be extracted with other tools.
Sega CD / Saturn / Dreamcast[edit]
For the Sega Saturn, see Playstation 1.
Sega Dreamcast game ripping can be done from a Dreamcast using the Dreamshell SD card reader or using a BroadBand adapter. (to be added)
GameCube/Wii[edit]
With a PC's Optical Drive[edit]
Only some out-of-print models of DVD drives may read GC and Wii discs, mainly from LG (compatibility list here). Even then, Windows won't recognize the disc as valid. You'll need a tool like Rawdump or Friidump to dump it. Make sure you convert the dump to ISO format.
With Homebrew[edit]
For the GC and Wii, use CleanRip.
You'll need a Wii with homebrew channel installed, so if you don't have homebrew already, go here check which homebrew installation method works for what System Version you have ETC. Now that you have Homebrew Channel and CleanRip installed here are instructions.
Make sure a GameCube controller is plugged into your Wii.
Insert your Wii or GameCube disc and your SD card or USB stick into the Wii.
Choose what device you're using, USB or SD using the GameCube buttons
Choose which file format your SD or USB stick is. (Must be FAT32 or NTFS, if not you'll need to format it, read down below for instructions)
If it asks you download Redump.org bat files. Press no.
Press A on your GameCube controller and it will start the ripping process, wait for it to finish and when its done the ISO file will be on your SD card or USB stick.
Instructions for formatting SD card/USB stick: If your SD card or USB stick is not FAT32 or NTFS here's how to format on a Windows computer.
Plug your SD card or USB stick into your computer.
Click on Start Menu, click on computer.
Right click on your SD card Or USB card.
Press Format, and choose FAT32 or NTFS (Make sure you backup files if there's any on there, as the formatting process will delete everything)
Wii U[edit]
Wii U discs have rounded edges making it impossible to read on Blu-Ray drives for PC the same way, though early dumping groups made a non-public physical modification to the Wii U to dump the data directly from its optical drive. If your console can run homebrew, however, you can dump your Wii U discs with Dumpiine, Wudump or disc2app. Only Wudump produces a lossless dump, the others extract the bare code and data for the game in either RPX/RPL (Dumpiine) or WUPInstaller (disc2app) format.
Nintendo Game Boy Advance / DS / 3DS[edit]
With a Flashcart (On DS)[edit]
With Custom Firmware (On 3DS)[edit]
To hack your 3DS, refer to 3ds.hacks.guide.
DS and 3DS cartridges can be dumped using GodMode9. This works for both the old and new models, as well as variations like the 2DS.
Sony Playstation Portable / Playstation Vita[edit]
Using PSP with Homebrew[edit]
To extract the ISO game image from a physical PSP UMD disc, you simply need a 6.60 CFW PSP, its USB connection cable, and a PC.
On the main menu, press the Select button to bring the PRO VSH menu with the neat overclocking options. You'll need to change UMD ISO MODE from 'Memory Stick' to 'UMD Disk' (don't forget to revert this after you're done).
Now, if you 'Initialize USB Connection' with your computer, what will appear under the freshly mounted drive in Windows isn't your memory stick, but a drive with a neat ISO file ripe for copying to your computer, which you can emulate or load in a CFW enabled PSP.
See Also[edit]
Converting PS1 ISOs to PSP Eboots[edit]
Convert your own PS1 ISOs into Eboots using PSX2PSP.
Popsloader[edit]
If you are having some trouble with converted eboots, be sure to download Popsloader v4g. Most of the games will work without it nowadays, but for those that don't, you'll need this. See popsloader compatibility list.
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