This console was too advanced for its time, and simply refuses to break. I remember when the ps4 first came out and everyone thought the touchpad was a LCD.
The Dreamcast did actually have some piracy protection. Back in the day though, a specific hacker team stole the official sdk which allowed them to find out the weakness in the copy-protection. From that point onward any CD-ROM that had the right data burned on it could run a game on Dreamcast no console mods needed. There is a bit more to this story, but this is about the gist of it.
@@88_Tsukasa you can play games depending on the revision of the console, easy to tell with the sticker on the bottom of the system (mainly due to the MILCD exploit) if there is a circle with a 0, 1, or no circle at all, it means that the exploit will work on it and you can burn no problem if there is a circle with a 2, you have a rare 2nd revision dreamcast, which means the MILCD exploit has been patched (on account of the support for MILCD being pulled from these final revisions), however, there are reports of some 2nd revision dreamcasts being able to play burned games, and its a bios patch so you can make it possible to play burned discs if you flash a bios onto the system that has MILCD support. there are always region chips and stuff, but its very easy to burn dreamcast games due to the exploit being thoroughly documented and the 2nd revisions being quite rare in the first place.
yeah it was ahead of it's time. It came out like 2 years before the ps2 and even had online functionality and was easy to develop for, and the controller even had analog triggers. Too bad Sega shot themselves in the knee with the saturn beforehand :(.
There is technically an "error" if you will: If a Dreamcast disc is played in the music player, an audio message will play telling the user to not play the disc as a CD (since it contains "game data", not audio).
as far as i know and i had one the early produced ones where able to play copies i later buyed a 2nd one after my first broke and it was later produced and it could play copies !
If i remember correctly. There's supposed to be a number after your ntsc or pal and it on those varients (0,1,2,3 etc) if the numbers were 2 or above it couldnt play burned games
5:07 Yeah, most Dreamcasts don't have any real anti-piracy because the Windows CE compatibility made what little there was easily bypassed. Models with it patched (you can tell by a circled "2" or "3" on the bottom) are actually somewhat rare but can be bypassed with a GDEMU (which you'll probably want someday anyway since their belts are all dying or dead, and most of them have bad lasers just due to wear and tear).
@@minignoux4566 The MilCD spec was included to make home development for CE possible without leaving the whole system open, but IIRC the main weakness that allowed the mode switching required to run native Dreamcast binaries from CE mode, was on Windows CE's side. It's called an exploit chain.
@@minignoux4566 Yes, but no? It's complicated. IIRC, there are components of CE on the NAND for security purposes, mostly just 1/2 the bootloader, a logo, and a hardware blob. The bootloader is supposed to remain resident and prevent switching to native binaries from CE code. I THINK (key word there, think) that memory residency is part of how Sonic Adventure 2's final antipiracy check was triggered, the floor hole in Cannon's Core? It also triggers on a GDEmu with a verified clean GDR image for similar reasons, it fails the memory integrity check.
I wish BK4 had his own console with his own errors. Just so we can hear his ear rape errors I have the perfect error for it: The BK4 is too hot It occurs when your BK4 is overheating. Edit: woah thanks for the likes :o
No, the console errors would be this: Corrupted BIOS: The BIOS are too hot. Dead components: The components are too hot. Overheating: The console is too hot. Hypothermia: The cold is too hot. Removing game disc while game is playing: The game disc is too hot. Removing wires when console is on: The wires are too hot. Mashing every button on the controller: The buttons are too hot. Breaking the controller: The controller is too hot. Loading corrupted save data: The save data is too hot. Controller battery dying: The battery is too hot. Putting in a PlayStation disc: The PlayStation disc is too hot. Putting in a PlayStation 2 disc: The PlayStation 2 disc is too hot. Putting in a PlayStation 3 disc: The PlayStation 3 disc is too hot. Putting in a PlayStation 4 disc: The PlayStation 4 disc is too hot. Putting in an XBox DVD: The XBox DVD is too hot. Putting in an XBox 360 DVD: The XBox 360 DVD is too hot. Putting in an XBox 1 DVD: The XBox 1 DVD is too hot. Putting in a Gamecube CD: The Gamecube CD is too hot. Putting in a Wii CD: The Wii CD is too hot. Putting in a Wii U CD: The Wii U CD is too hot. Putting in a music disc: The music disc is too hot. Putting in a movie disc: The music disc is too hot. Breaking the internal fans: The fans are too hot. Putting in pirated games: The pirated game is too hot. Not having a hard drive in the console: The hard drive slot is too hot. Using third-party controllers: The third-party controller is too hot. Plugging in the video cable but not the audio cables: The audio cables are too hot. Plugging in the audio cables but not the video cable: The video cable is too hot. Console not having room to breathe: The breath is too hot. Getting the console wet: The wet console is too hot. Getting the controller wet: The wet controller is too hot. Playing 1-Player games with 2-Players: The second player is too hot. Dying and your soul being put into the console (Joke): You are too hot.
This console does have a warning message when something happens at boot up. If you try to boot certain games when a VGA Box/Cable is plugged in, instead of the game, a message telling you that the game is not VGA compatible and that you have to turn off the console to change to the proper cable, will pop up. P.S.: You don't really have to turn off the console, just change de cable or move the switch on the box. and boot the game again. Also, when the DC has an error, it will either return to the menu or it will simply freeze.
1. Access file with no VMU. 2. Also try playing the disk on a audio player (not really an error but it’s like the Sega CD warning if you try to play a Sega CD disk in an audio player). Also speaking of Sega CD, make Sega CD/Genesis errors!
The dreamcast was the last video game console manufactured by sega. It was launched in 1999 and in pal countries, the spiral had to change to blue because tivola was using an orange spiral as their logo before the dreamcast came out.
I noticed you asked about whether the Dreamcast has any sort of copy protection. The Dreamcast doesn't actually use CDs for games, but uses something called a GD ("Gigabyte Disc"). The GD is a custom derivative of the CD created specifically for the Sega Dreamcast and Sega Naomi (arcade hardware based on the Dreamcast) that allows for 1~GB instead of the usual 700~MB of a CD. Because it was a custom format specifically for a game console, GD-Rs were not released to the public, and were instead something a game developer had to get from Sega to test their game on. However, the Dreamcast *also* supports something called a MIL CD. This is a multimedia CD variant that was quite elaborate in concept, but none of the record labels were interested, so not much came of it. Which turned out to be a good thing, because this was simply a minor CD variant that was supposed to handle Dreamcast code. That means supporting this format allowed people to put Dreamcast games on a regular CD. If the game was too big for a CD, you could still try to fit the game on one by reducing the quality of any streamed movies or audio. The thing is, MIL CD support was only on early Dreamcasts. Later Dreamcasts removed support, and so you needed an actual GD to run games. I believe there are actually more of the earlier Dreamcasts out there, but don't quote me on that. As for how people got the data off the GD-ROMs themselves? Well, somehow the Dreamcast SDK got leaked, and from there people figured out how to turn the Dreamcast into a GD drive, much like how it's possible to get data off of a GameCube disc by using Wii homebrew. The data was in a standard ISO format, and from there it was fairly easy to figure out to get games to fit on CDs.
Th eonly errors you're gonna get are... Put a Dreamcast Disc in a CD player (you'll get a voice recording that states you should only play the Dreamcast game on a Dreamcast unit) And if you Try to boot a Dreamcast game that doesn't support a certain video cable with said video cable. for example NBA on NBC showtime won't work through VGA without being force booted into it, only like 15 games have this
At 5:02 It is because of the Japanese MIL-CD disks. Which was just music. They found out a flaw in those discs that would allow the console to boot homebrew. This created the boot discs as someone mentioned. Eventually they discovered you could do this all on one disc. Almost any dreamcast can boot from burned discs. There are a few edge cases that cant like really late model NTSC consoles and a few special edition Japanese consoles.
1. As far as I'm aware, NTSC-U DCs are the only one with the number on the bottom. PAL and NTSC-J systems don't have it. 2. There are (2) systems that can play burned games. It just needs to be made before November 2000 (there ARE systems made during November that can play burned games, but it's a 50/50 chance they will.)
@@godofmediocrity7582 I'm glad to inform you that my PAL Dreamcast has a number. Same with any other PAL Dreamcast I've seen. I don't know about the NTSC J Dreamcasts though.
@@Pedro.Sanchez Alright, then that's my mistake. I knew that some reigons did not have the number, but I guess it's only Japan. Thank you for correcting me.
I bought a brand new Sega Dreamcast 22 years ago, and it still work fine. The quality of this console is awesome. The only error or common failure that u can see in some consoles, is a defective disc reader
There is one REALLY obscure error on this system. Some games are not compatible with the VGA box. If you would try and play a unsupported game with VGA in, it will tell you to swap your inputs. And this error is in the bios!
Sometimes when you put in an unrecognised disk and go to music it will read you out an error/warning message in about 5 different languages. It basically tells you the disk isn’t supported by the Dreamcast so get it out or the speaker might explode. I always liked the German one.
Here's an idea on how to possibly get something weird to happen It's pretty clear the system has some sort of mechanism to verify if the disc lid has been closed. What would happen if you were to hold that down with a tooth pick or something, then quickly take out the game disc while it's running and insert a new disc?
Anyone notice the Dreamcast and playstation similaritys: 1.the console is the same looking just with the sides cut of 2. The start up screens include an orange logo on a white background 3.they both have really small handhelds to go with them . Dreamcast = VMU PlayStation = PocketStation
Your Dreamcast was manufactured before October 2000, so it still has the MIL-CD functionality that left a security hole, which is allowing it to run burned discs.
Oh man you have the rare blue dreamcast. Its only available in certain countries. Normal dreamcasts are orange. Its not matter to gameplay, but its rare to find. (I just typed it in 3:12 so he said)
imagine if you insert a blank cd disc into this console, it starts making a static glitch, console screeches VERY LOUD, and static on the screen moves.
The most common "glitch" that you can see on Dreamcast is the time and date reset when the internal battery is damaged, same as ps2, gamecube or og xbox, dreamcast request you for set it every time that you turn it on.
This XML file does not appear to have any style information associated with it. The document tree is shown below. AccessDenied Access denied. Anonymous caller does not have storage.objects.get access to the Google Cloud Storage object.
The Dreamcast does have anti-piracy, if you grab an original game and put it on a CD the Dreamcast will not run it, what happens is that the games that are on the internet were patched, adding an extra step to trick the console
7:32 Dreamcast can only play CD-ROMs and GD-ROMs, which is what dreamcast games are stored on. PS2 games are stored on DVD-ROMS, a format that the Dreamcast Optical Drive is not built to read. That is why its not booting into the game. Also Dreamcast does have copy protection but it was relatively primitive and easily worked around, like it was with the PS1 piracy protection.
@@TheDigiPunX the only cd rom games that can play on a PlayStation 2 are old PlayStation 1 disks that are backwards compatible. A traditional PS2 game is always on a DVD-ROM
Dreamcast uses a proprietary medium called GD-ROM (so named for holding a gigabyte instead of the 700MB of a standard CD), but some bonus discs called MIL-CDs were produced as well (basically little bonus discs that came with other products, like one which I think came with an album), which aren't held to nearly the same standard. And they both use the same executable format. Whoops. Sega of America did eventually catch on, so later US models have had their MIL-CD functionality removed altogether.
Regarding the copy protection thing - Dreamcast does have it. It's supposed to play GD-ROMs (giga disk read-only memory), which is the standard game format, supposed to hold a gigabyte of data instead of the normal 650MB, as well as MIL-CDs, a kind of multimedia CD. The MIL-CD could contain a Dreamcast executable file, but it had to be burned in a way that only Sega knew... until someone read the RAM of the Dreamcast while the executable was being read, and the executable burning way was the same for every game. Thus, people started converting GD-ROM games to MIL-CD games (chopping off a FMV sequence here and there), and they can be played on unmodified Dreamcast consoles! Here's a great video by the Modern Vintage Gamer that explains it in detail: th-cam.com/video/rj56VU_VmWg/w-d-xo.html
Even when people say that not, It did, the thing is that for pirate the console people used a boot CD that disable It instead of modify the console, when time passed finally people discovered a way to put the game and the anti-piracy boot disabler on the same CD, that is the way that the DoA2 of the vid works probably.
It is because of the Japanese MIL-CD disks. Which was just music. They found out a flaw in those discs that would allow the console to boot homebrew. This created the boot discs as someone mentioned. Eventually they discovered you could do this all on one disc. Almost any dreamcast can boot from burned discs. There are a few edge cases that cant like really late model NTSC consoles and a few special edition Japanese consoles.
There is something creepy about Dreamcast discs, as when you put them in CD players, they tell you a creepy message and well, just listen to it yourself, but other than that, less than nothing...
What about the sea man warning? "This is a DREAMCAST disk. If you continue, you run the risk of transmitting deadly viral diseases to your household appliances. (Some people...)"
The Dreamcast does actually have an error. If you try and play a game that doesn't support VGA, you'll get a message that it doesn't support VGA, and ask you to swap the cable
This console was too advanced for its time, and simply refuses to break. I remember when the ps4 first came out and everyone thought the touchpad was a LCD.
*touchpad
Touchpad...
For God's sake, edit your comment to say touchpad. You have everyone confused.
@@GoldenGrenadier sawwy
what did it say before
The Dreamcast did actually have some piracy protection. Back in the day though, a specific hacker team stole the official sdk which allowed them to find out the weakness in the copy-protection. From that point onward any CD-ROM that had the right data burned on it could run a game on Dreamcast no console mods needed. There is a bit more to this story, but this is about the gist of it.
MILCD was patched out in VA2.1 revisions.
Wait they could play games or did the anti-piracy stop them?
@@88_Tsukasa you can play games depending on the revision of the console, easy to tell with the sticker on the bottom of the system (mainly due to the MILCD exploit)
if there is a circle with a 0, 1, or no circle at all, it means that the exploit will work on it and you can burn no problem
if there is a circle with a 2, you have a rare 2nd revision dreamcast, which means the MILCD exploit has been patched (on account of the support for MILCD being pulled from these final revisions), however, there are reports of some 2nd revision dreamcasts being able to play burned games, and its a bios patch so you can make it possible to play burned discs if you flash a bios onto the system that has MILCD support. there are always region chips and stuff, but its very easy to burn dreamcast games due to the exploit being thoroughly documented and the 2nd revisions being quite rare in the first place.
I remember seeing a Modern Vintage Gamer episode about that, interesting stuff
Still got my Utopia Boot Disc
The dreamcast: *Turns to be one of the best consoles of it's time*
Sega:Good work team,now self destruct.
Ps2: scares kids out yet sold more
Dreamcast: *im safe but I sold poorly*
Sony is overrated
@@NellyTubeAwesomeURL psp Is underrated
@@NellyTubeAwesomeURL yeah Nintendo is better IMO
@@NellyTubeAwesomeURL that's the truth right there. They can't do anything right.
The Dreamcast’s graphics look pretty good for a 90s console.
yeah it was ahead of it's time. It came out like 2 years before the ps2 and even had online functionality and was easy to develop for, and the controller even had analog triggers. Too bad Sega shot themselves in the knee with the saturn beforehand :(.
Technically it wasn’t a 90s console
@@geebee6010 its a 19-20 console
we call it 1998/2003
Ikr
There is technically an "error" if you will:
If a Dreamcast disc is played in the music player, an audio message will play telling the user to not play the disc as a CD (since it contains "game data", not audio).
That also happens with a SEGA CD disk, as well!
@@Lilo-water Only difference is that the Dreamcast ver. doesn't send chills down your spine
After a while playing a dreamcast game on a on the dreamcast music player it crashed after 30 seconds (for me)
@@CyberdustStudios AND it doesn't have cool riffs
@@avegee24tvyou mean Metallica on crack
A system so heavenly cannot have errors.
@Laoloutus *casting a dream
It only has malfunctions... and people corrupting its BIOS for fun.
Good
@ChaoLover :3 Who, scares666?
I may have mixed up the name.
I guess it's just that heavenly
Dreamcast doesn't need to be modified to play pirated games
as far as i know and i had one the early produced ones where able to play copies i later buyed a 2nd one after my first broke and it was later produced and it could play copies !
If i remember correctly. There's supposed to be a number after your ntsc or pal and it on those varients (0,1,2,3 etc) if the numbers were 2 or above it couldnt play burned games
let me correct it what i wrote wrong
i meant the later produced one which i buyed then later couldnt read copies
PS1 IS JEALOUS
*So I can play FSX on Dreamcast?!* 😅😅😅
I always loved the dreamcast opening sequence... It's so chilling and calm
same me to
Nekoset UwU aaaaaaaaahhh
What about the gamecube?
@@DJ4461 It's good but it doesn't have the same feel as Dreamcast
@@n0kitsune oh. Ok i couldnt tell.
5:07 Yeah, most Dreamcasts don't have any real anti-piracy because the Windows CE compatibility made what little there was easily bypassed. Models with it patched (you can tell by a circled "2" or "3" on the bottom) are actually somewhat rare but can be bypassed with a GDEMU (which you'll probably want someday anyway since their belts are all dying or dead, and most of them have bad lasers just due to wear and tear).
it's not thanks to Windows CE, but rather an exploit with the rarely if not never used MilCD feature that was removed in later revisions
@@minignoux4566 The MilCD spec was included to make home development for CE possible without leaving the whole system open, but IIRC the main weakness that allowed the mode switching required to run native Dreamcast binaries from CE mode, was on Windows CE's side. It's called an exploit chain.
@@KiraSlith wasn't Windows CE never impleented on the console and only on the game disc?
@@minignoux4566 Yes, but no? It's complicated. IIRC, there are components of CE on the NAND for security purposes, mostly just 1/2 the bootloader, a logo, and a hardware blob. The bootloader is supposed to remain resident and prevent switching to native binaries from CE code.
I THINK (key word there, think) that memory residency is part of how Sonic Adventure 2's final antipiracy check was triggered, the floor hole in Cannon's Core? It also triggers on a GDEmu with a verified clean GDR image for similar reasons, it fails the memory integrity check.
That feeling when you accidentally yeeted your blank disc 😔
Oof
Nice pfp
7:48
7:48
🎵 YEET DiSc 💿
7:48 eEEEeEeeeEeEeEeEEeEeEeeeEe I'm gOinG awAaaaaAaAaAaAyYYYy
Its Blue in Europe Version because the Red Loop was already Copyrighted by a German Company called "Tivola" so for no trouble they change it to Blue.
Plorter interesting
*Tivola
Interesting.
-I still like the orange one-
Orange color is still better tho
Wowies
When i see GT2000
*Turn volume down*
Despertado 11 xD its GT3 but close because the year would have been off
OK IF YOU DIDNT LOWER THE VOLUME GET THIS
*_VRROOOOOOM_** **_*LOUD EXAHUST SOUNDS_*
Same
does the soulja boy console have any errors? oh wait, the console is an error. damn. oh well.
The console is a mistake*
@@hypnotised-clover you ruined it
@@CCTVRECORDING0000001 soulja ruined everything
Lol
@@hypnotised-clover r/Wooosh
Oh well, it doesn’t has any errors, but it was worth a try.
have*
Yep, It's always good to try something new!
@Yusuf SG wtf?
I know a error you put in a dif disc and press music i think
It has a bsod (black screen of death caused by a dead fan, read the newer comments..)
The Dreamcast intro on PALs be like:
I'm blue da ba dee da boo da
Tak na prawdę
No more of that song dammit
Not gonna lie I actually like that one pretty better than the orange one simply because blue is my favorite color
yes
@@katarzynalagoda8251 tak
I wish BK4 had his own console with his own errors.
Just so we can hear his ear rape errors
I have the perfect error for it:
The BK4 is too hot
It occurs when your BK4 is overheating.
Edit: woah thanks for the likes :o
No, the console errors would be this:
Corrupted BIOS: The BIOS are too hot.
Dead components: The components are too hot.
Overheating: The console is too hot.
Hypothermia: The cold is too hot.
Removing game disc while game is playing: The game disc is too hot.
Removing wires when console is on: The wires are too hot.
Mashing every button on the controller: The buttons are too hot.
Breaking the controller: The controller is too hot.
Loading corrupted save data: The save data is too hot.
Controller battery dying: The battery is too hot.
Putting in a PlayStation disc: The PlayStation disc is too hot.
Putting in a PlayStation 2 disc: The PlayStation 2 disc is too hot.
Putting in a PlayStation 3 disc: The PlayStation 3 disc is too hot.
Putting in a PlayStation 4 disc: The PlayStation 4 disc is too hot.
Putting in an XBox DVD: The XBox DVD is too hot.
Putting in an XBox 360 DVD: The XBox 360 DVD is too hot.
Putting in an XBox 1 DVD: The XBox 1 DVD is too hot.
Putting in a Gamecube CD: The Gamecube CD is too hot.
Putting in a Wii CD: The Wii CD is too hot.
Putting in a Wii U CD: The Wii U CD is too hot.
Putting in a music disc: The music disc is too hot.
Putting in a movie disc: The music disc is too hot.
Breaking the internal fans: The fans are too hot.
Putting in pirated games: The pirated game is too hot.
Not having a hard drive in the console: The hard drive slot is too hot.
Using third-party controllers: The third-party controller is too hot.
Plugging in the video cable but not the audio cables: The audio cables are too hot.
Plugging in the audio cables but not the video cable: The video cable is too hot.
Console not having room to breathe: The breath is too hot.
Getting the console wet: The wet console is too hot.
Getting the controller wet: The wet controller is too hot.
Playing 1-Player games with 2-Players: The second player is too hot.
Dying and your soul being put into the console (Joke): You are too hot.
Ooh, that’s hot
That’s real hot
It could have a hot Evo and earrape music as the startup screen
@@Rarestein I Agrre *GT2000 EARRAPE INTENSIFIES*
The BK4 startup screen is too hot 😎
This console does have a warning message when something happens at boot up. If you try to boot certain games when a VGA Box/Cable is plugged in, instead of the game, a message telling you that the game is not VGA compatible and that you have to turn off the console to change to the proper cable, will pop up.
P.S.: You don't really have to turn off the console, just change de cable or move the switch on the box. and boot the game again. Also, when the DC has an error, it will either return to the menu or it will simply freeze.
1. Access file with no VMU.
2. Also try playing the disk on a audio player (not really an error but it’s like the Sega CD warning if you try to play a Sega CD disk in an audio player).
Also speaking of Sega CD, make Sega CD/Genesis errors!
ShepardPower
The only I remember is Gen's NTSC error and CD's incorrect disc format error
"Rest in peace", bit however you freakin nailed it
The dreamcast was the last video game console manufactured by sega. It was launched in 1999 and in pal countries, the spiral had to change to blue because tivola was using an orange spiral as their logo before the dreamcast came out.
"Hey Dreamcast, do you have any er-"
Dreamcast: *"NO"*
Ok
Lol
how about
"Hey Dreamcast, do you have any er-"
Dreamcast: "Please insert game disk"
"But-"
Dreamcast: "PLEASE INSERT GAME DISK"
@@Fogolol lol
Well... That's a good thing
BK4: Mentions GT2000
Me: LOWER THE VOLUME NOW GOGOGOGOGOGO
*we all know why*
Why
The earrape
I immediately skipped to the ending. I was surely disappointed.
*turns up the volume*
Just so you know:
USA and Japan: Dreamcast logo is orange
Europe: Blue Dreamcast Logo
USA RED-JAPAN ORANGE-EUROPE BLUE
They got sued by a german company called Tivan
Emma McCormack Canada was the same thing as the US.
Oh so that's why the startup is blue!
🌀
I know another error
The system was too Underrated and for soem reason only lasted 2 1/2 years in japan and 2 everywhere else
The ps2 is so ovverrated
Sega killed it.It discontinued the dreamcast to go 3rd party.Thank you sega japan.
Sad
@@sunswift its because back in its time it was used mostly as a DVD player
So THAT'S where the Dreamcast's budget went!
W mieście nie
@@katarzynalagoda8251 what?
@@zverozkii translation: In the city` no
I noticed you asked about whether the Dreamcast has any sort of copy protection. The Dreamcast doesn't actually use CDs for games, but uses something called a GD ("Gigabyte Disc"). The GD is a custom derivative of the CD created specifically for the Sega Dreamcast and Sega Naomi (arcade hardware based on the Dreamcast) that allows for 1~GB instead of the usual 700~MB of a CD. Because it was a custom format specifically for a game console, GD-Rs were not released to the public, and were instead something a game developer had to get from Sega to test their game on.
However, the Dreamcast *also* supports something called a MIL CD. This is a multimedia CD variant that was quite elaborate in concept, but none of the record labels were interested, so not much came of it. Which turned out to be a good thing, because this was simply a minor CD variant that was supposed to handle Dreamcast code. That means supporting this format allowed people to put Dreamcast games on a regular CD. If the game was too big for a CD, you could still try to fit the game on one by reducing the quality of any streamed movies or audio.
The thing is, MIL CD support was only on early Dreamcasts. Later Dreamcasts removed support, and so you needed an actual GD to run games. I believe there are actually more of the earlier Dreamcasts out there, but don't quote me on that.
As for how people got the data off the GD-ROMs themselves? Well, somehow the Dreamcast SDK got leaked, and from there people figured out how to turn the Dreamcast into a GD drive, much like how it's possible to get data off of a GameCube disc by using Wii homebrew. The data was in a standard ISO format, and from there it was fairly easy to figure out to get games to fit on CDs.
THE DREAMCAST IS TOO HOT
throw it into the chimney then power it on, you get The Dreamcast is boom boom error
999999°F = DC too hot.
stop.
stop overheating Dreamcast it's so painful
@Windows 2000=Wannabe
You know it's a dreamcast when you got them sonic gloves
...that was a bad joke
T h E r E L a X i N G E N d
i make worse jokes lol yours is original so its good
Yeah atleast it’s not a Nobody: joke
ツĞoㄥDsғM1❶ ツĞoㄥDsғM1❶ ツĞoㄥDsғM1❶ ツĞoㄥDsғM1❶ ツĞoㄥDsғM1❶ ツĞoㄥDsғM1❶ ツĞoㄥDsғM1❶ ツĞoㄥDsғM1❶ ツĞoㄥDsғM1❶ ツĞoㄥDsғM1❶ ツĞoㄥDsғM1❶ ツĞoㄥDsғM1❶ ツĞoㄥDsғM1❶ ツĞoㄥDsғM1❶ ツĞoㄥDsғM1❶ ツĞoㄥDsғM1❶ ツĞoㄥDsғM1❶ ツĞoㄥDsғM1❶ ツĞoㄥDsғM1❶ ツĞoㄥDsғM1❶ ツĞoㄥDsғM1❶ ツĞoㄥDsғM1❶ ツĞoㄥDsғM1❶ ツĞoㄥDsғM1❶ ツĞoㄥDsғM1❶ ツĞoㄥDsғM1❶ ツĞoㄥDsғM1❶ ツĞoㄥDsғM1❶ ツĞoㄥDsғM1❶ ツĞoㄥDsғM1❶ ツĞoㄥDsғM1❶
I-
Th eonly errors you're gonna get are...
Put a Dreamcast Disc in a CD player (you'll get a voice recording that states you should only play the Dreamcast game on a Dreamcast unit)
And if you Try to boot a Dreamcast game that doesn't support a certain video cable with said video cable. for example NBA on NBC showtime won't work through VGA without being force booted into it, only like 15 games have this
At 5:02 It is because of the Japanese MIL-CD disks. Which was just music. They found out a flaw in those discs that would allow the console to boot homebrew. This created the boot discs as someone mentioned. Eventually they discovered you could do this all on one disc. Almost any dreamcast can boot from burned discs. There are a few edge cases that cant like really late model NTSC consoles and a few special edition Japanese consoles.
7:49 The Dreamcast sleeps tonight.
WOW ROBLOXER, DO YOU HAVE DISCORD?
I do.
@@WildDiamond07 great, MY DIS DOCTOR85#4543
Mine is Windows OSSV 95#7526
@@WildDiamond07 okay)
1:22 the dreamcast is able to read burned disks as-is without modification, as long as it has a 0 or a 1 encircled in the label at the bottom side.
1. As far as I'm aware, NTSC-U DCs are the only one with the number on the bottom. PAL and NTSC-J systems don't have it.
2. There are (2) systems that can play burned games. It just needs to be made before November 2000 (there ARE systems made during November that can play burned games, but it's a 50/50 chance they will.)
@@godofmediocrity7582 I'm glad to inform you that my PAL Dreamcast has a number. Same with any other PAL Dreamcast I've seen. I don't know about the NTSC J Dreamcasts though.
@@Pedro.Sanchez Alright, then that's my mistake. I knew that some reigons did not have the number, but I guess it's only Japan. Thank you for correcting me.
the nntendo playcastbox is too hot.
Entenbo*
Nopetendo
@@JinteiModding Nintendon't
@@JinteiModding Yestendo
@@tucatheman EndMySufferyTendo
I bought a brand new Sega Dreamcast 22 years ago, and it still work fine. The quality of this console is awesome. The only error or common failure that u can see in some consoles, is a defective disc reader
There is one REALLY obscure error on this system. Some games are not compatible with the VGA box. If you would try and play a unsupported game with VGA in, it will tell you to swap your inputs. And this error is in the bios!
This video should have just been called
"Fucking around with a dreamcast"
Bad word!
the comment is changed because of a reason.
@@benjamint.4776 he meant freaking around with a dreamcast -_-
@@mummy5933 You should leave people alone
@@benjamint.4776 You guys can be annoying
9:29 GT INTENSIFIES
9:27 Granturismo.exe strikes back like a horror creepy image of a yellow car xd
Boo!
evo
It is edited.
@TD - 06HL 776446 Lougheed MS that's what happens when you turned off some consoles.
I guess that's just TV itself.
At 9:28
Sometimes when you put in an unrecognised disk and go to music it will read you out an error/warning message in about 5 different languages. It basically tells you the disk isn’t supported by the Dreamcast so get it out or the speaker might explode. I always liked the German one.
why do i wanna see the speakers explode on it 😭
@@unnamedscribble-auttp try it and document your results 😂
9:19 *my neighbors at 3am:looking for MUSIC*
9:17 uh oh AHHH it’s getting louder and earrape
why earrape
8:08 The question every F1 fan has during a race with Vettel in it
Dreamcast: IM GONNA BEAT THE PS2 IN SELLING! YAYYYYYY
PS2: *uno reverse card*
Dreamcast: OH SH-
*_rip in rest dreamcast 1998 - 2001_*
Rest in piece in rest?
@@Comet1310YT it's a joke 🤷♀️
@@themanman7642 ?
Comet 1310 rip in rest? Lol
The PS2 came after the dreamcast
7:01 GameCube does that too when the lid isn’t closed.
I knew it! Answer me, please.
@@Arkensius1157 Okay.
Here's an idea on how to possibly get something weird to happen
It's pretty clear the system has some sort of mechanism to verify if the disc lid has been closed. What would happen if you were to hold that down with a tooth pick or something, then quickly take out the game disc while it's running and insert a new disc?
On some systems, that's a common way of getting a burned game to play, it's called disk swapping.
late as shit but the thing to sense it is inside the shell
@@thedarkdragon89disc swapping* disc means optical disc, disk means hard disk drive
Can you imagine what SEGA's console game would be like today if the Dreamcast did well?
... Oh I'd rather not... I just wish we could get back around to those days!!!
4:43 The developper edition has a better intro.
They should have been swapped...
Try searching for windows ce errors since the dreamcast uses windows ce as its operating system
maybe you will find an error
or maybe not
Dreamcast doesn't even have an OS, weirdo. Each GD disk comes with its own OS.
The thing that you see on the screen is the BIOS, though.
Not it does not.
Only certain games do, and its stored on the disks itself.
*cailou made the dreamcast*
@@mittyycat9554 My mom made it
Thomas Kings stop with those comments it's an old trend ;-;
Anyone notice the Dreamcast and playstation similaritys:
1.the console is the same looking just with the sides cut of
2. The start up screens include an orange logo on a white background
3.they both have really small handhelds to go with them .
Dreamcast = VMU
PlayStation = PocketStation
not all dreamcasts have orange logos
@@powerpc64 i know about the european ones
Also you can add this one:
4. Both had their copy protection defeated fairly easily.
@@Wikcanand the orange/red one
Your Dreamcast was manufactured before October 2000, so it still has the MIL-CD functionality that left a security hole, which is allowing it to run burned discs.
8:22 *nervously turns down volume*
7:49 hey this is a meme lol
s🅱️innala
7:55 Whoops
Omg
Me:All game console HAVE a error!
After watching the video
Also me: well I be damned...
Mapa Polski w
Dreamcast is just that great.
5:37 It was like as if the game ended with a final drumbeat. Cool.
I LAUGHED SO HARD WHEN YOU DROPPED THAT DISC LMAO
7:49 (Muffled Laughing)
Mapa Polski w
Wow this console is a god
“All hail the Sega Dreamcast our flawless god”
lol why did I do that
Why did you do that?? Because you wanted to
Because you’re cool! 😎
nice icon
Dreamcast is king of all gaming RESPECT IT NOT SAY THE PS2 IS BETTER THAN IT
It still has some errors he just couldn’t find it
Oh man you have the rare blue dreamcast. Its only available in certain countries. Normal dreamcasts are orange. Its not matter to gameplay, but its rare to find. (I just typed it in 3:12 so he said)
Blue dreamcasts were common in Europe
Most people I know that owned a Dreamcast had used a burned copy at least once. I only know of a few people w/a Dreamcast.
Love the Dreamcast. If interested you can find so many good racing games, all worth checking out!
4:53 the logo is blue in Europe because a German company had an orange spiral in its logo so the made it blue in Europe
Tivola
0:21 Master Hand HP: 300.
7:39 Actually, Dreamcasts can play Audio CDs, so....there's that.
Doesn't play video CDs though unless it has that clunky addon. Sega Saturn is better !
We can place an uno card to put a dreamcast disc into a pc, it will give us an audio message.
imagine if you insert a blank cd disc into this console, it starts making a static glitch, console screeches VERY LOUD, and static on the screen moves.
The most common "glitch" that you can see on Dreamcast is the time and date reset when the internal battery is damaged, same as ps2, gamecube or og xbox, dreamcast request you for set it every time that you turn it on.
so just when the cmos dies?
@@unnamedscribble-auttp Yes
This console is a legend
Fr
This is such a great channel.
By the way congratulations on hitting nearly 25,000 subs.
Tak na prawdę o
I love the error videos on this channel.
Error: The Dreamcast is too hot.
This XML file does not appear to have any style information associated with it. The document tree is shown below. AccessDenied Access denied. Anonymous caller does not have storage.objects.get access to the Google Cloud Storage object.
@PlasmaTaco uhh what
@@igrratu uhh what
@@dontreadmypfp1720 uhh what
@Reesey Beesty uhh what
starting GT200
me having a PS1 errors flashback:
*S* *T* *R* *O* *K* *E*
W mieście nie
Every console: "we must let the player know if something go wrong with us"
Dreamcast: NOONE CARES!
European Dreamcast.
BK4 lives in Europe...
*gets reported for leaking personal infos*
He could be in America and he just bought the Dreamcast from a European seller. But I wouldn’t mind if he was in Europe, I’m from there too 😊
I'm from Britain :).
@@notaweebANIMATIONNGAMING I'm Turkey :D
@@peridonesse Gobble
8:47 here comes the G T 2000 meme
7:47 😂😂😂LOL😂😂😂
I can't believe no one commented about it
Me copiastes
The Dreamcast does have anti-piracy, if you grab an original game and put it on a CD the Dreamcast will not run it, what happens is that the games that are on the internet were patched, adding an extra step to trick the console
6:57
BK4: Dreamcast Disc Eject Speedrun
Dreamcast: "You were saying?"
9:28 I see something that may hurt my ears.
7:32 Dreamcast can only play CD-ROMs and GD-ROMs, which is what dreamcast games are stored on. PS2 games are stored on DVD-ROMS, a format that the Dreamcast Optical Drive is not built to read. That is why its not booting into the game.
Also Dreamcast does have copy protection but it was relatively primitive and easily worked around, like it was with the PS1 piracy protection.
Sega Red Panda silver PS2 discs are DVD-ROM the purple ones are CD-ROM
@@TheDigiPunX the only cd rom games that can play on a PlayStation 2 are old PlayStation 1 disks that are backwards compatible. A traditional PS2 game is always on a DVD-ROM
at least the intro of the Dreamcast doesn't make me me wanna crap myself like the ps1 does
it does the exact opposite of it
*ps2
Pussy boy
It sounds heavenly. The dreamcast decended from the gods!
Otter's Vintage All-Sorts, this is IRONY, so r/woosh
PS2: Oh, great, you just unplugged me.
Dreamcast uses a proprietary medium called GD-ROM (so named for holding a gigabyte instead of the 700MB of a standard CD), but some bonus discs called MIL-CDs were produced as well (basically little bonus discs that came with other products, like one which I think came with an album), which aren't held to nearly the same standard. And they both use the same executable format. Whoops.
Sega of America did eventually catch on, so later US models have had their MIL-CD functionality removed altogether.
The Dreamcast was my first ever console and this brings back great memories
4:00 is where it starts
Regarding the copy protection thing -
Dreamcast does have it. It's supposed to play GD-ROMs (giga disk read-only memory), which is the standard game format, supposed to hold a gigabyte of data instead of the normal 650MB, as well as MIL-CDs, a kind of multimedia CD. The MIL-CD could contain a Dreamcast executable file, but it had to be burned in a way that only Sega knew... until someone read the RAM of the Dreamcast while the executable was being read, and the executable burning way was the same for every game. Thus, people started converting GD-ROM games to MIL-CD games (chopping off a FMV sequence here and there), and they can be played on unmodified Dreamcast consoles!
Here's a great video by the Modern Vintage Gamer that explains it in detail: th-cam.com/video/rj56VU_VmWg/w-d-xo.html
The perfect console doesn't exis-
Sega:are you sure about that?
You: Oh man... it's yellowing just like PS1s!
Dreamcast & ps1:UR MEAN 1001111010111011
7:48 *W h e e z i n g I N T E N S I F I E S*
5:02 "Dreamcasts doesn't have any CD piracy protection?)
*FBI OPEN UP*
Even when people say that not, It did, the thing is that for pirate the console people used a boot CD that disable It instead of modify the console, when time passed finally people discovered a way to put the game and the anti-piracy boot disabler on the same CD, that is the way that the DoA2 of the vid works probably.
Barely nobody talks about inserting a disc from the dreamcast into a pc.
It is because of the Japanese MIL-CD disks. Which was just music. They found out a flaw in those discs that would allow the console to boot homebrew. This created the boot discs as someone mentioned. Eventually they discovered you could do this all on one disc. Almost any dreamcast can boot from burned discs. There are a few edge cases that cant like really late model NTSC consoles and a few special edition Japanese consoles.
7:48 my sister and I lost our shit hearing this, no matter how many times I replay it, it's still stupidly funny lol
7:48
🎵 YEET DiSc 💿
Dude GT3 as background music. Epic gamer moment
Dreamcast errors
1. Please insert game disc
Difficulty: easy
Creepiness: 1/10
Insert a random non Dreamcast disc
You forgot the error in which some Dreamcast games don't support VGA cable.
BK4 stands for:
Breaking and
Killing your ears with
4 earrape “The GT2000 earrape is too hot.”
No it stands for “Burger King 4”
Bruh king 4
3:55 why is there a Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner?
Cause the Sega Dreamcast is somewhat loud. It never seems to bother me though. The fat PS2's fan bothers me more if anything.
Lara B no
@@tacoengineer6660thought it was a reference to the name dreamliner
Dreamcast really was the ultimate weapon in the 90's
The image right at the end I thought it was dryed up SpongeBob for a second lol
7:49 when u drop ur spoon at 3 AM
5:37 LOL 😂
There is something creepy about Dreamcast discs, as when you put them in CD players, they tell you a creepy message and well, just listen to it yourself, but other than that, less than nothing...
It just tells not to play the disc in a cd player
What about the sea man warning?
"This is a DREAMCAST disk. If you continue, you run the risk of transmitting deadly viral diseases to your household appliances. (Some people...)"
@@dusk-3r I have already done that, it happens exactly what SobaDGN said!
@@DJ4461ok... That's a lie! 🤣
So... Your trying to scare us? It ain't working! 🤣
after 5 years, i love how the moment you dropped the blank CD became the most replayed part in this video
The Dreamcast does actually have an error. If you try and play a game that doesn't support VGA, you'll get a message that it doesn't support VGA, and ask you to swap the cable