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The English language version supersedes all translated versions of these rules. Translations of these rules into other languages are provided for informational purposes only.

This page describes the rules for acceptable movie submissions.
Failure to abide by these rules will result in rejection.
To learn creating TASes, read the TASing Guide.
These rules are subject to change as the site continues to grow, and have done so many times in the past. There may be published movies that break these rules: these movies were published before the rules against them were put in place, and we do not unpublish movies for any reason. These movies should not be used as precedents for current submissions.
If your submissions repeatedly and flagrantly break movie rules, you may become a Limited User and temporarily lose your submission privileges. This is rare, however, and is generally only done to prevent spamming of the submission queue and to encourage the submitter to engage with the community to hone their TASing skills. A Limited User's privileges can be reinstated if they show that they are learning to produce quality TASes.
For any questions that remain after having read this page, please ask a judge.
Table of contents

Rules for games

The game must be acceptable

We have two sets of rules on acceptable games, varying between tiers: rules for Moons that match the general rules and guidelines, and rules for Vault that have additional restrictions. There is a third tier, Stars, but it is filled manually by cherry-picking the best runs. Its rules are the same as for Moons.

Moons

This tier contains entertainment-based movies that may or may not be speed-oriented. The game must be one that facilitates entertainment value when tool-assistance is applied in accordance with the TASing guidelines on fashion.

Vault

This tier contains speed-based movies that don't have much entertainment value, but still represent meaningful tool-assisted speedrun records. Game choice is tightly limited. Vault rules filter out games that don't hold much weight when tool-assistance is applied in accordance with the TASing guidelines on optimization. Vault needs clear cuts, so whenever something can not be clearly distinguished, such a movie gets rejected.
Users have attempted to compile a list of bad game choices which may be helpful.

The game must have clear achievable goals

A game which is simply about wandering aimlessly is not considered proper.
The gameplay needs to stand out from non-assisted play, and must not be seen as trivial. Note that a game is considered trivial until proven otherwise. If getting perfect times everywhere is not challenging, such a game is considered trivial. If later a technique is found that makes TASing it challenging, that game becomes acceptable.
A game which is about freeform creativity is not considered proper.
If a game consists of presenting a story, with little to no user creativity altering the game in any way, then it is unacceptable.
This includes games which are overwhelmingly made up of cutscenes, with little to no user interaction anywhere.
This also includes games of a Choose Your Own Adventure story book variety, where the user has no creative control beyond choosing between predefined choices.

No game hacks

Game hacks are not eligible for this category. We demand hacks with entertainment value, therefore they are judged by the Moon tier requirements.

No board games, game show games, or primarily educational games

These game genres are not considered serious.
A serious game where educational elements only occupy small portions of the game is eligible. If educational elements are scattered throughout the whole game, and most of the game can be completed casually without having to perform many educational activities, education is considered a secondary part of gameplay, and such a game is eligible. A game which requires the player to be able to read in the game's native language is not a disqualification. If parts of a game require certain knowledge and details in order to complete it which is provided in-game during the course of otherwise normal play, learning and using such knowledge is not a disqualification.

Sports games are allowed under restrictions

Sports running with a fixed time, such as football, soccer, or basketball are not eligible.
The game must have a meaningful ending point with meaningful completion criteria.
Team-based sports games should provide enough control to the player to be able to competitively speedrun the game and have a meaningful record, as decided by the judge.
The run must not be seen as trivial.
Sports games in the Vault are restricted to one game per series per platform, unless gameplay is significantly different. For example, PGA Tour Golf III on the Sega Genesis may obsolete PGA Tour Golf II on the Sega Genesis. Which game obsoletes which is decided by a judge in favor of the game that makes a more technically impressive run.

Non-official games (hacks, homebrews, etc.) and prototypes

Non-official games are allowed for submission. However, they go through more scrutiny than other games. This is because the game itself also becomes subject to judgment, so it must meet a minimum standard of quality or notability to be eligible for publication. We look for games that can be played and completed, have some recognition or popularity, or are notable in some other ways as decided by the judge and the audience.
Bootlegs are not accepted if they are direct clones of licensed games on the same platform: we prefer official versions. Ports from other platforms are acceptable, as long as the gameplay has notable differences.
Game hacks must be accepted by the community as being entertaining enough to make it to the Moons tier, usually by showing unique gameplay or brand new content. Hacks of the same game may obsolete each other if the new hack is deemed superior, such as by showing off more unique content.
Game hacks and homebrews must be in a finished release state; demo or beta versions of in-development games are not allowed. Homebrews and hacks that are not finished, but have been abandoned by their authors (explicitly as a public announcement, or implicitly as lack of updates or replies from the author for at least 5 years straight), can be considered.
Prototype game versions are only accepted if there is no stable release version available on the same (or compatible) system.

No cosmetic hacks or fan translations

We don't allow hacks that only serve to change the looks of the original game. Hacks must provide unique gameplay. This rule is strict.

Adult-only games are not allowed

Video games rated adult-only, or unrated adult video games with strong sexual content and/or extreme violence to AO-rating standards, are not allowed in any circumstance.

The game must be real

The movie should look like it could have been played with authentic hardware. This makes it easier to relate to.
This details to the following points:

The ROM image must be good

If a platform supports several types of media, we allow conversion between them (to speed up the loading times, for example) only if the software itself remains unchanged, and if the platform in question natively supports transferring the software from one medium to another without any unsupported modifications to the platform itself (hardware or software), and can execute the software when transferred to the new medium.

The ROM image must be integral

It is not allowed to make use of images that are not intended to belong to the game being TASed. It is considered intended, if it is endorsed by the game or by its publisher (as an add-on, for example).
For games that consist of multiple images that are intended to be used in a specific order, inserting a new image is only allowed when the game explicitly prompts for it, and the intended order must be respected.
If the gameplay requires, or mainly consists of, inserting arbitrary ROM images (such as the Monster Rancher series), such images must also be inserted only when the game duly prompts. However, there are strict requirements on the nature of such arbitrary images:
  1. You need to use an image that's been generated specifically for the movie in question
  2. You need to provide clear instructions on how to recreate it
  3. This image has to serve the goals of your movie in a considerably optimal way
  4. You need to provide insight on why you consider it optimal
  5. The method used to create it must be free and easily accessible

Virtual Console and extracted games

Sometimes a game may contain another game within it. For example, copies of The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time for the Nintendo GameCube contain within it a Nintendo 64 image for the original game, as well as the Master Quest edition. These are valid Nintendo 64 game images that work on a real Nintendo 64, although in-game details refer to specifics for the Nintendo GameCube instead of the Nintendo 64.

Play games that are emulated well

Emulation of several platforms such as Nintendo 64, DOS, or specific Arcade boards is still far from perfect, and some games may work worse than others on the same platform. This may be grey area on such systems, but we generally aim to publish videos that look like they could be played back on the original video game system. Movies of games that are not emulated well (have graphical or functional glitches that do not exist on the real console) should not be submitted.
Accurate emulation is preferred over inaccurate! The goal of our movies is to show what could theoretically be done on a real console. Exploiting emulation bugs goes against this goal.

No tampering with the files the game is composed of

Some systems, such as DOS, expose separate parts of the operating system and/or the game to the user. You are not allowed to manipulate these files except as is normally necessary to play the game, such as "installing" it.
MS-DOS and clones have different memory layout features such as HIMEM and EMM386 which support various settings which a game may require or perform better with. Configuring these built-in options, or utilizing a comparable third party tool such as QEMM's driver is allowed. DOS also requires certain extenders in order to run 32-bit applications or access protected mode. Using an extender included with a game, or a compatible third-party one which does not alter the gameplay is allowed.
That means no renaming/copying/deleting/replacing/editing files that affect gameplay. However, editing environment settings or utilizing standard third-party tools in order to get a game to load is allowed as long as the game runs as it's supposed to.

Tools that manipulate ROM or RAM (e.g. Game Genie codes) are not allowed

They count as hacked versions of the game if they touch ROM areas. Either convert them to a real hack or don't use them at all.

No questionable emulator settings

The emulator should be set to emulate the system as accurately as possible while still allowing the game to be played. You should not depend on a particular emulator hack to gain speed.

No randomized or unverified custom initial RAM state

Emulator settings to initialize RAM a specific way are not allowed unless the entire RAM state as a whole is proven to be a possible starting state for the console being emulated.

Real-time clock (RTC) settings

For systems that support a configurable real-time clock, any timestamp supported by the system may be set as a starting point for a run if the game makes use of it, e.g. for RNG seeding reasons.

The region settings must be correct

If you are running an NTSC game ((U) or (J)), you must set your emulator to record in NTSC mode. Likewise, if you are running a PAL game ((E)), you must record your movie in PAL mode. Any other setting will get your movie promptly rejected. Note that such settings are enabled automatically in most emulators, but it's better to check before you start recording.
If you are obsoleting a movie that was recorded with the wrong settings, that movie's completion time will be adjusted to account for the fact that PAL games run at 50 Hz and NTSC at 60 Hz.
This rule only comes into effect on older console games that have badly programmed region lock-out.

The BIOS must be real

If the system you are using makes use of system BIOSes, only use real BIOSes, not custom ones.

Match the BIOS region to the game's region.

If BIOS images are region-dependent, do not use an image from a different region. Only use USA BIOS for (U) versions, Japan BIOS for (J) versions, and Europe BIOS for PAL versions ((E) or other). See below for details in general about using non-USA region games.
In the case of PSX, the region is determined by the last number in the BIOS revision, SCPH-xxx0 is Japan, SCPH-xxx1 is USA, SCPH-xxx2 is Europe, and SCPH-xxx3 is also Japan. See this Wikipedia page for more information. Any official PSX BIOS version is accepted, provided it matches the region of the game played.
Note that SCPH-5501 and SCPH-7003 are completely identical, and therefore can be considered interchangeable.
Make sure to mention the BIOS name used in your submission notes.

PC game environment must be legitimate

PC games don't support an infinite variety of hardware and software combinations. Each game usually targets some known specifications and is expected to work correctly only within a certain range of those. Specifications outside that range may be totally incompatible with a given game, and on some variations it can glitch out and not be fully playable.
In-game settings and environment parameters used in the movie must be legitimate and intended. This includes in-game options, console commands, launch arguments, in-game codes, host hardware and software tweaks, etc.

Use the correct version

If there are significant in-game differences between different versions of a game, movies which take advantage of such differences can be published side by side. This can include things like different weapons or routes available to the player, different levels being present, or different bosses fought. If a particular version introduces a mechanic which can significantly alter how the game is played (such as where player characters respawn immediately when they die instead of being brought back to a nearest checkpoint), a movie utilizing such mechanic can be published side by side with one that doesn't.
However, different versions of a game usually don't diverge much. For when they're mostly the same, the considerations are as follows:

(J) vs (U)

The US ((U)) versions are generally preferred over the Japanese ((J)) versions due to the use of English language, which is easier to understand for the general audience. However, the Japanese audience here is significant, and there is no longer a specific requirement at TASVideos to use one version over another.
Keep in mind that time gained solely through basic ROM differences will be discounted for the purpose of comparison. This includes:
Only actual gameplay improvements will be considered. For example:
The improvement to be judged in this example is just 1 frame; the 100 frame gain from a shorter title screen is discounted.
It is up to the author to do the math and elaborate upon the version differences during the submission process. The more information you present, the easier it will be to judge your movie.

NTSC vs PAL (USA/Japan vs Europe)

Console versions of PAL games run at a lower framerate than NTSC games, running at ~50Hz compared to NTSC's ~60Hz, and the games themselves are often not modified or poorly modified to accommodate to the change in timing. Due to this, PAL versions of ROMs are generally not allowed, unless there are significant technical and/or entertainment merits to using them. See Rygar and Blaster Master for examples of such merits.
PAL versions of the following games are allowed but not recommended. Use a (U) version if available.
The Sega Master System is a unique system in that it can officially play PAL games at NTSC frequency in PAL-M regions (Brazil). Therefore, playing PAL games with NTSC settings is allowed for SMS games, but only if the game has a known official release in Brazil. Additionally, if it is known that the game has been officially released in South Korea, we allow to run the Korean ROM in the NTSC mode, provided the Korean BIOS is used.
Another exception is games developed in PAL Asia for Famiclones. They are fully compatible with Famicom (NTSC), but can also work on the PAL speed if the console uses a hybrid PAL-NTSC mode. Such games can be recorded in the Hybrid/Dendy mode if it is proven that they indeed originate from PAL Asia.

General notes

There are several schools of thought that dictate the game version to pick for a TAS.
Consider these carefully when making the final decision. If still unsure, ask a judge.

Rules for movies

The movie must play the game from the beginning

Giving yourself a headstart is not allowed. The game must start from a common starting point, which is the very beginning.

The movie must begin from console power-on

The movie must begin from the game's power-on state (no loading of saves). That is, the following option must be chosen:
"Record from SRAM" and "Record from now/savestate" or similar is not allowed, except under special circumstances (see the section on save-anchored movies).

Installed games

Games that require installation to separate storage media before playing don't count as starting from a save as long as you haven't actually started the main game executable.
We require detailed installation instructions if the instructions included with the game are not sufficient to perform the installation. The movie will be rejected if we can't produce a compatible installation.

We do not allow save-anchored movies

We want a standard starting point for movies (power-on). Saves introduce an infinite amount of possible variation that may cause the game to behave differently compared to starting from power-on. They also can be hacked, allowing nearly transparent cheating.
However, there are certain games with unlockable modes, second quests, or other things of interest that can only be accessed if a save file (or an otherwise "dirty" SRAM) is present. If you wish to submit a movie made on such a mode, you will need a verification movie made and provided alongside it. Any input file that starts from power-on (for example, a previously submitted movie for the game in question) and creates the exact circumstances for your submission to sync will do.
Note that you don't have to optimize the verification movie: it only serves as a save/SRAM generator that makes it possible to claim the legitimacy of your effort. This submission is a good example.
In any case, ensure your run of an unlocked mode provides meaningful difference compared to a run of a fresh game. For example, if the unlocked mode features some new levels or bosses but your run triggers the endgame sequence before reaching any of them, and this same glitch exists in a fresh game as well, then there is no benefit to unlocking this mode.

No skipping to the end with a password

The point is to demonstrate how quickly a game could be beaten if the player had superhuman abilities; skipping major sections of it with a password defeats the purpose.

We allow playing unlockable content using in-game passwords

Using in-game codes[1] or passwords at the start of a game is allowed if it uses a built-in hard mode or if it makes cosmetic changes to the game, as long as parts of the game are not skipped.
Using in-game codes or passwords at the start of a game to unlock a special game mode, character, level sets, or otherwise play the game in some unusual way is allowed.

The movie must be complete

Your movie should begin from the console power-on and end when the last decisive action has been delivered. There are no specific rules for an exact endpoint but it must adhere to the following rules:

Post-completion input

Some games acknowledge the game has been completed, and then require additional input to show the rest of the ending sequence. We always prefer full movies, but for the purposes of speed records, you may stop the movie when the initial ending sequence is guaranteed to begin, without including extra input to process the entire ending. The following conditions must be met in this case:
Examples of situations that require additional post-completion input:
In any case, if there is additional input required to process the full ending, and it's not included in your movie, always mention that in the submission comments, as well as the reasons for not including it.

Games without clear ending

Games that loop endlessly without some kind of ending can still have a definite ending point which can be any of the following:
Movies that pick farther ending options will obsolete ones that play less — even if they are longer.

Games with additional level sets or games

Games which consist of multiple full games available immediately via a menu, such as separate level sets, often referred to as episodes in DOS games, or the individual games in Super Mario All-Stars, may be played and submitted individually. Playing a single episode or individual game to completion, or all episodes or games, are both considered game completion. Playing multiple, but not all, episodes or games is not considered completion. Multi-games should be avoided if all the games they contain exist separately on the platform; play the individual ones instead.
If additional games or level sets only become available as prior ones are completed, completion of the unlocked material requires that all games or episodes must be completed in a single movie. This does not apply if all the unlocked material can be accessed via some kind of in-game password system[1].

The movie must be reproducible

It is not enough that you did it once — we need to be able to run the movie and get the same result as you did. A movie that only synchronizes on the author's computer won't be accepted.

Use an official emulator version

Every officially supported TAS emulator has a repository to host official releases obtainable as a package (like binaries). These releases are supported by TASVideos. Using custom or interim emulator builds compiled from source code (from e.g. SVN or Git repositories) is not officially supported. Always make sure your movie syncs on the official releases; use interim builds at your own risk. If a movie syncs on some interim build but doesn't sync on any official release, it will be rejected.
Note that some emulators require interims because their official releases are infrequent and/or often outdated (including Dolphin and VBA-rr); for these emulators, interim versions are accepted on a case-by-case basis. If you are considering using such an emulator version, confirm with a judge whether it is justified in your case. If it is clear that there is no other way to TAS your game, permission will be granted.

Any important settings not saved in the movie file must be stated in the submission text

Ideally, the movie file, a copy of the game and an emulated copy of the system should be everything needed. Sadly, the world isn't ideal. Please provide all settings that may affect synchronization of your movie on different systems.

The movie must be good

In particular:

A speed-oriented movie must beat all existing records

If your movie is going to beat something, be sure it beats it.
If your tool-assisted movie is slower than the non-tool-assisted world record for the same game, aiming for the same goals, your movie will be rejected.
Do your research to avoid this. Look for the existing unassisted speedrun records. Look for previous TAS movies in the submission queue or on the forums.
Check places such as YouTube or NicoVideo for speedruns; tool-assisted or otherwise.
Failure to beat existing records will result in rejection.

The movie's technical quality must be acceptable

Don't be lazy. We will try and beat your movie. We should hopefully not succeed. See the Guidelines on how to make a movie that meets the site's standards.

The movie should not be painful to watch

If a movie features player decisions obviously detrimental to entertainment, such as sickening camera angles, seizure-inducing activity, and other rectifiable presentation choices within it, the movie is not eligible for any tier.

Movie goals

There can be all sorts of goals for movies, the most traditional ones are fastest completion (often referred to as "any%") and full completion (such as "100%", "all levels", "best ending"). There are also additional goals that may greatly diverse from those ("playaround", "pacifist", "newgame+", "maximum kills", and so on). We have certain restrictions that determine which goals can be published. These restrictions are different for each tier.

Moons

Goal choice is not severely restricted in this tier: esoteric and unorthodox goals are acceptable, but only as long as they make for entertaining movies.

Vault

Goal choice is limited to fastest completion time (any%) and full-completion (such as 100% or best ending). Other goal choices are not eligible for this tier.
Goal choice criteria must be clear, non-controversial, and objectively verifiable. Vault requires clear cuts, so a movie with unclear goals that can not be agreed upon will be rejected.
Movies that aim for in-game time instead of real-time are only allowed for Vault if that goal makes gameplay shorter. If optimizing for the in-game time makes actual gameplay longer, such a movie is not eligible for Vault.
Save-anchored movies are not eligible for this tier.
Independent game modes are treated as separate games, and are allowed for Vault as separate movies. Independent mode is defined as a one that inherently offers more than 50% of unique gameplay (for example, more than a half of unique bosses or unique levels). This includes character choice and other in-game options.
A movie that uses codes[1] (even secret ones) to play an unlockable level set, use a built-in hard mode, or enable cosmetic changes improving the game, is eligible for this tier. Other unlockable content not present from the game start is disallowed, unless it is required for full-completion.
Using unintended PC environment is not allowed for Vault.

Full completion rules

This section talks about all tiers.

A clear consensus is required on what constitutes full completion.

Full completion criteria must be reached through in-game actions only.

Maximum points

Maximum points or score is allowed as a full-completion category under the following conditions:

Arbitrary code execution

Entering arbitrary code into a game via an exploit is allowed as long as some additional qualifications are adhered to.

ACE exploit should not be caused by an emulator bug

Due research will be made to ensure your "arbitrary code execution" movie is valid in terms of emulation accuracy. If the exploit that enables ACE is related to an emulator bug and relies on it, a movie containing such an exploit will be rejected.
However, if the emulation inaccuracy only slightly changes the outcome compared to the actual console, but the exploit is in principle legit, such a movie is acceptable. To consider an ACE exploit legit, it should be proven that slight changes in the setup will still lead to the exact same ACE possibilities on the real console.

Speedruns

Players can use arbitrary code to quickly complete games, skipping large portions of them.

Playarounds

Players can also use arbitrary code to create their own entertaining playarounds which do fun things with the game.

Cheats, debugging codes, and arcade continues are not allowed

This includes any in-game codes[1], input sequences such as the Konami Code, as well as immediately accessible hidden menus.
Note that, if the feature accessible in that way is suggested explicitly by the game itself or mentioned in the manual as a normal means of playing, such as level restart shortcuts in the Legend of Zelda or Metroid, it is usually allowed. If the code is not used, and the features it provides are accessed directly using game glitches, it is also allowed.
Additionally, buying continues with coins in arcade games is considered to be a cheat-like practice, as it provides the player with a free and virtually unlimited power resource, and as such goes against the typical concept of a TAS.
These rules are not strict, but are motivated by the same concept as the guideline that says you should play on the hardest difficulty. As such, you can use a code to unlock the hardest difficulty, although it's better to first ask on the forums if this is a good idea. Indeed, sometimes it may make the movie worse!

Obsoleting a published movie

A submission may obsolete a published movie by improving or surpassing it upon its stated goal. A submission that follows the same goals as a published movie must beat it in its intended goal. For example, if the goal of a movie is fastest time, the submission must be faster; a slower or tied movie will be rejected. For movies of a game which never really ends, a movie which chooses a later ending point can obsolete one which chose an earlier ending point, if it overlaps in content.
When obsoleting a published movie that aims for fastest time, the goal should be to adhere to its playing standard in both technical and entertainment aspects.
When comparing against a prior movie for faster time, the faster time must come from improved play in the actual gameplay segments. For example, gaining time by switching to another version which loads faster, or has shorter cut-scenes is not counted as an actual time improvement. A movie which doesn't have any actual in-game gameplay improvements over its published predecessor will not be accepted.
If time is gained from using a more accurate emulator, but gameplay hasn't been improved, such a movie will be rejected. However, if improved emulation introduces more lag, extends the cut-scenes, or slows down gameplay in some way, yet the actual gameplay has improved, such a movie will be considered a valid improvement.
Site rules still apply even if the published movie breaks them. We make mistakes sometimes, but that doesn't provide a green light for you to break the rules.
Movies for all games or episodes inside a multi-game or multi-episode game can obsolete individual movies that only play a single game or episode within the game. This is assuming that the combined movie surpasses all the individual movies that it is trying to obsolete.

Movie file metadata must be correct

It may be easy to lose track of the exact number of rerecords, but do try to get it roughly correct. While it is not supposed to be used for judging, it is nonetheless a fact that a lot of our users pay attention to.

The movie must be properly attributed

Do what is better for the audience, not yourself. Trying to get your name on the site at all costs will not make you popular. TASVideos aims to remain a polite community, so certain offenses are regulated by rules.

Do not claim authorship for something you haven't made

Taking another user's movie and submitting it under your name is strictly forbidden. Such offense is potential grounds for a ban.
This doesn't apply to situations where a similar or identical solution is discovered and implemented independently.

A modicum of effort is required

Taking another user's movie and trimming or changing the last few frames is strongly discouraged if it doesn't make the movie reach the winning condition any sooner. Such movie will likely be rejected during the grace period on the similar grounds as above.
If there is an oversight that requires an easy fix at the end of the published movie, it is much more preferable to notify its author first, and see if they want to implement it themself. If not, it would still be preferable to attribute the new movie as co-authored. See the next paragraph for elaboration.

Crediting other users' contribution

Movie files uploaded to the site are shared under the Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 license, which means that in general, when someone's work is being reused, they should be credited as co-authors of the derived work (4.b).
When optimal gameplay results in little to no variation in input sequences, matching others' work becomes unavoidable, so co-authorship is not required. However when you copy someone else's artistic choices, the original author should be duly credited. Note that this includes cases when the movie you are reusing does not come from TASVideos.
There is no strict authorship rule for cases when research or development was contributed instead of actual movie input, or for the so-called "frame wars" (series of minor competitive improvements from different participants), so such cases are left to the judge's discretion.

Rules for systems

libTAS movies

Use stable versioned releases of games, dependencies, and of libTAS itself

Install everything from versioned packages. We don't want dependency hell to spoil Linux TASing.
libTAS version 1.3.1 or later is preferred.
If official stable releases aren't enforced, movies may abuse some bug that's been fixed the next day, or a feature that's not supposed to be there. Installing a particular commit may also be a nightmare.

Use common Linux distributions

We want configuration to be common, because it increases accessibility and simplifies installation. Compiling Linux from the source should not be involved.
We only allow distros that offer a live CD, have a simple and straight forward installation process, have a GUI, have easy steps to install packages with no hassle, and are among the more popular ones. The version must be a stable release.
Allowed distributions:
Allowed architectures:

Use movie annotations to provide installation instructions

Providing links for everything is also preferred.

Windows games are disallowed

Games for Windows that can be TASed in libTAS using Wine aren't allowed for submission. Note that for future purposes, testing this workflow is still encouraged.

Game Boy series: Use the best mode

Some Game Boy/Game Boy Color games work in multiple modes, depending on the device you run them on:
Because the game can work differently depending on the mode, the one you choose is saved in the movie file. This can be difficult to change later, so you should always start recording in the best mode supported by the game.
The default options that appear when starting a recording should often reflect the device the game was specifically released for, and newer device modes may cause glitches, so think twice before changing them.
Important note: SGB mode in VBA-rr is disallowed entirely due to poor sound emulation. To use SGB, lsnes or BizHawk must be used.

Dolphin movies

Game images in the NKit format are not allowed.

JPC-RR movies (DOS): CPU frequency restrictions

CPU frequency settings may be restricted or not, depending on the game.

Hourglass movies

For Hourglass, you need to provide the DxDiag log to prevent against syncfailures due to different hardware. For instructions, see the thread on the Hourglass forum.

Commodore 64

For Commodore 64 movies only, movies made using disk ROM files are preferred over movies using tape ROM files. This is due to the very slow loading times of C64 tapes, which significantly affect the watchability of such movies.
This applies also for cracked Commodore 64 disk ROMs, if no non-cracked disk ROM version is available.

DeSmuME movies

If your movie makes use of DS microphone audio input, all the required audio data must be embedded into the movie. For that purpose, use DeSmuME version 0.9.9a. The steps required to embed .wav files into the movie are provided on the release page.

Movie formats

Acceptable movie files

We accept key-input movies of these formats, and only these formats:

Arcade / CPS / Neo Geo

Atari 2600, Atari 7800

DOOM

DOS

Game Boy & variants

Game Boy Advance

Gamecube & Wii

Linux

MSX home computers

NES

Neo Geo Pocket (Color), WonderSwan, Atari Lynx

Nintendo 64

Nintendo DS

PlayStation

SG-1000 and ColecoVision

Sega CD

Sega Genesis/Megadrive

Sega Master System and Sega Game Gear

Sega Saturn

Super NES

TI-83

TurboGrafx 16 (PC Engine), PCE-CD, SuperGrafx

Virtual Boy

Windows


Multimedia files are not accepted

We do not accept multimedia files (AVI, WMV, MP4 and so on). The site wants a method of movie control, such as:
Multimedia files make the above points impossible.
There is no way to verify a multimedia file. It would be impossible to prove that a video was or was not edited.

[1] When we speak about codes that are part of a game that we allow for use in certain scenarios, we are talking about passwords that can be entered in a menu, pressing some buttons on the title screen, passing execution parameters or setting environment variables for DOS games, or anything of a similar nature. This excludes things like Game Genie codes or emulator cheating tools. Codes are considered secret if the game never tells them to the player, neither through official instructions nor during gameplay.
[2] Binary .lsmv format is not accepted at the moment (not implemented yet), use the .zip-based one (the default one).
[3] Legacy Bizhawk .bkm format is deprecated but still submittable (for now)

LegacyPages/MovieRules last edited by moozooh on 7/11/2021 12:24 PM
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