As copyright enforcement increases (Nintendo and other companies frequently issue DMCA takedowns), classic "open indexes" are disappearing from the public web. Many have moved to:
MAME is an evolving project. As the development team uncovers more accurate data from physical arcade boards, they re-dump chips. This means a ROM set that worked perfectly in MAME version 0.139 will likely fail to load, crash, or report missing files in MAME version 0.250. index of mame roms
mame -listfull | grep -i "neogeo"
(This recursively downloads all files, avoids parent directories, and strips headers.) This means a ROM set that worked perfectly in MAME version 0
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ROM images are digital dumps of the data found on the physical chips of an original arcade motherboard. Because arcade machines were often complex and modular, a single game often requires a "ROM set"—a collection of multiple files that drive different components of the system, such as graphics and sound. Types of ROM Sets