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Official PS2 Memory Card (8 MB) PlayStation 2 hard disk drive and Network Adapter. Storage media: 8 MB memory card for saved games and data transfer Uses MagicGate encryption; Read speeds of up to 130 KB/s; Capacities of up to 128 MB or 256 MB (2x 128 MB) for some third-party memory cards; Optional 40 GB hard disk drive (requires Network Adaptor)
PlayStation 2 back showing Expansion Bay on SCPH-30001. The PlayStation 2 Expansion Bay is a 3.5" drive bay introduced with the model 30000 and 50000 PlayStation 2 (replacing the PCMCIA slot used in the models 10000, 15000 and 18000, and removed with the slimline model 70000) designed for the network adaptor and internal hard disk drive (HDD).
The original PS2 multitap (SCPH-10090) cannot be plugged into the newer slim models. The multitap connects to the memory card slot and the controller slot, and the memory card slot on the slimline is shallower.
Official PS2 Memory Card. The Memory Card (8 MB) (SCPH-10020) with MagicGate encryption is used to store settings, EyeToy video messages and savegames. [15] It is the earliest known commercial product to use ferroelectric RAM (FeRAM). The Memory Card's microcontroller (MCU) contains 32 Kib (4 KiB) embedded FeRAM manufactured by Toshiba.
The Slimline PS2 is considerably smaller than the "Fat" PS2. PlayStation 2 models were produced from 2000 to 2013. Some PlayStation 2 (PS2) revisions only change in their internal construction while others feature substantial external changes. Each region receives a different model number; for example, the V18 was released in North America as ...
PCSX2 is a free and open-source emulator of the PlayStation 2 for x86 computers. It supports most PlayStation 2 video games with a high level of compatibility and functionality, and also supports a number of improvements over gameplay on a traditional PlayStation 2, such as the ability to use higher resolutions than native, anti-aliasing and texture filtering. [6]
Open PS2 Loader, abbreviated as OPL, is an open-source program that allows playing of commercial games and homebrew installed from external storage devices. [2] It has support for the internal hard disk drive (like HD Loader), USB drives (like USB Advance), SMB (over network), i.LINK and MX4SIO.
A memory card or USB flash drive can store Tourist Trophy replay/ghost files downloaded from either the official game website or elsewhere online, and can be used to exchange files with another USB device. Once the files are in the flash drive, the user can upload them from within the game in order to compete with a ghost (in "Time Attack" mode ...