never knew about guzzlefish. thank you sir. :)Quote:
Originally Posted by ChaoofNee
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never knew about guzzlefish. thank you sir. :)Quote:
Originally Posted by ChaoofNee
I've been using Cart Commander to catalog my stuff. It doesn't have complete lists for everything, but hey, it's free:
http://www.arcaderestoration.com/index.asp?OPT=3&CBT=20
I've been using Video Game Tracker for years. It's good enough and it's free.
bah.
http://www.vgrebirth.org/ has 7000 games in it's database, it's totally free. I may be shillin' for my boy Quixo, but it doesn't mean his site isn't cool.
Meh, GameTZs worked fine for me all these years, and is actually worth paying for.
If I ever needed something to complement it, I'd just go with Video Game Tracker. It's free and efficient enough. This only working for newer games also makes it especially useless for most collectors.
IGN has a good one, too, which is also free. I havent run into anything not in its database yet.
I still haven't finished putting most of my 16-bit stuff in, but most of everything else is in there. Click my sig in case anyone cares.
I use Microsoft Access. The difference is, I am left with a data-rich database with which to publish pages to the internet or do various other things.
This would be a cool product for peope who aren't computer savvy, but really, if you are posting here...
Yeah.Quote:
Posted by Master
I use Microsoft Access. The difference is, I am left with a data-rich database with which to publish pages to the internet or do various other things.
This would be a cool product for peope who aren't computer savvy, but really, if you are posting here...
So basically... there are more, cheaper, and possibly more effecient (Based on 88's post) ways of cataloging. This is only a little easier, which means it will probably sell. Cause people are great at finding easier ways to do already simple tasks.
This post reminded me I haven't updated my list in awhile, time to get cracking on it :p