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A Dreamcast DVD Player Appears!

Image source: Throaty Mumbo

The Dreamcast's inability to play DVDs out of the box is often cited as one of the main reasons the system faltered in the face of competition from Sony's PlayStation 2. Indeed, even the late, great Bernie Stolar himself mused about SEGA's decision to eschew a DVD drive in favour of internet capabilities when we spoke to him several years ago. In an effort to capture the buzz around DVD technology at the time, SEGA Europe went as far as bundling the Dreamcast with a seperate standalone DVD player, but it was too little, too late - the writing was already on the wall for the little white box of dreams.

Now, anyone who knows anything about the current state of the Dreamcast scene will attest to the ingenuity of the community when it comes to squeezing more than was ever intended out of the console. We have new games coming out at a steady pace, new VMU technology, new controllers, the system is back online, there's a whole online gaming scene and replacement internal components are myriad. At this point then, it was probably only a matter of time before somebody reverse engineered a Dreamcast to be able to play DVDs...and that's exactly what one particularly talented YouTuber has accomplished.

Going by the name Throaty Mumbo, the gentleman in question describes himself as someone who likes to 'test and play around with old hardware and software,' and upon viewing the video above, I can attest to this claim. Through a series of tests and hardware experiments, Mr Mumbo successfully convinces a Dreamcast to recognise and eventually play an Aqua Teen Hunger Force DVD via a drive connected to a controller port with a bit of Raspberry Pi action thrown in for good measure. It's a really interesting journey of discovery and raises the question of whether an officially released DVD drive attachment could have turned the Dreamcast's fortunes around back in the day.

Be sure to check out Throaty Mumbo's channel here.

Image source: Derek Pascarella

But wait - there's more! In other, somewhat relevant Dreamcast video player related news, Dreamcast development legend Derek Pascarella (with help from Chris Daioglou of Dreamware Enterprises fame) has recently released a patch which removes the proprietary infrared dongle requirement from the DreamMovie VCD/MP3 player, allowing for standard Dreamcast controller support. Check out Derek's work, read a history of the DreamMovie hardware and software, and download the fruits of his labour over at Github.

9 comments:

  1. Only 27 years too late...

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  2. I’ve heard there was a great Dreamcast stand that could play DVDs… 👀

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  3. No, it would not have saved it.. do you know why? Because it wasn't failing, it had already sold enough from lunch to make up its R&D money, and although it was selling slower than the ps2, it was still selling. It was a niche market for people that couldn't afford the ps2, after the PS2 launched and the Dreamcast price was reduced. The reason why I failed is because the Panasonic GameCube was too faulty to release for the 2001 Christmas season, and Nintendo bought the Dreamcast architecture off of sega, so they could update it, rebrand it, repackage it, and have a product for the 2001 Christmas season that wouldn't break six weeks after the kid got the present. Do some digging, you'll see that they are basically the exact same system, the GameCube version just has a newer chipset, and uses less, but larger ram chips, other than that, same device... Which Sega pulled from the shelves, just 6 months before a GameCube that had never been seen before appeared out of nowhere... What's just happens to have a one-to-one compatibility for Sega software, allowing them to instantly Port all the Dreamcast popular games directly to gamecube.. starting to make sense yet? Dreamcast never failed, it got bought out....

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    1. Lol. Completely inaccurate. Why would Dreamcast be bought out if it were doing so good?

      The GameCube and Dreamcast architecture were completely different. Let's act as if your wacky theory were legit. How did Nintendo have tons of games ready to go for the launch? Did they ask Sega for dev kits before buying the Dreamcast architecture?

      Why did the Dreamcast games also show up on PS2 and Xbox? Did they also buy the Dreamcast architecture? Were all three systems just reskinned Dreamcasts?

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    2. Please, tell us more about this conspiracy, Godchi1d 😅

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  4. My favourite dreamcast accessory was the Game Gear player that fitted under the console and let you you play Game Gear and Game Gear Advance games on the big screen with a proper controller.

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  5. What is going on in these comments?!

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    1. No idea what it is about the the Dreamcast's inability to play DVDs that inspires such insanity in people but we've been getting spammed non-stop.

      It's like British people when the weather is hot, we lose our minds

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