but alas, DOSBox wouldn't load the cue file same error message.ĭouble-clicking the cue file tries to open it with a CD burner. bin they begin at and how long they are, etc. Looking at the cue file, it *looked* like it'd be okay, there were entries there enumerating all the music tracks and specifying at what offset in the. So I tried using cdrdao to rip it, by doing a command along the lines ofĬdrdao read-cd -read-raw -datafile TombRaider.bin -device /dev/sgr0 -driver generic-mmc-raw TombRaider.cue The other option to rip a DRM-protected disc popped up a warning saying that a DRM-protected game copied in this way would require a No CD patch to play it, and that the files ripped from it would be unsuitable for something or other that made me pretty confident it wouldn't work in DOSBox. cue and tried to mount it in DOSBox and it told me "Invalid file path" (the file path was right if I intentionally misspell the path, it says "File not found"). this game is for the PC though, but is similar to PS1 games in that it has a separate audio and data track. The only option that was kinda close to what I wanted was the option to rip a PS1 game disc. However, it didn't really work all that well. I have a feeling that I'll have to investigate how these files work if I want to copy this Tomb Raider disc more efficiently. Sega Saturn) come not as ISO files, but as a BIN and CUE file. I've seen (in torrents and stuff) that CDs of older mid-90s game systems (e.g. Regular in-game sound effects work, though, since these are on the data track. In DOSBox, I can mount this ISO as its D: drive, and install and run the game, however the music track doesn't work so, the game has no background music, and during certain in-game cinematics where the audio was provided from the music track, there is no audio. If I open it with Archive Manager, the contents are all files with underscores as names, of varying lengths (_, _, _, etc). In this case, it does create an ISO image, but it's a pretty weird one. How does one back up a CD like this? I usually do something like `dd if=/dev/cdrom of=TombRaider.iso`. CDA files from the audio track, and one containing the files from the data track. Two different CD devices were mounted, one containing all the. Well, putting the CD into a Linux (Ubuntu) computer showed both tracks. So, when putting the CD into a music player it would play the audio track, but putting it into a (Windows 95) computer would show the data track. It's one of those games from the mid-90s that contained a data track that was separate from an audio track. It's old and beat up so I want to duplicate it to a newer CD, and/or play it directly from an ISO using DOSBox. I have an old retail CD of the original Tomb Raider game for DOS (Windows 95 era). I'm wondering if anyone can help me out with this:
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