Iirc we submit hashes of a file on 360 discs that match various waves - it was just a thought, I am also doubtful many people will be able to legibly read+submit them.

On both OG and 360 discs, there is some ASP ID, as documented on XboxDevWiki:
"The following table lists known ASPnnnn numbers found on Xbox dvd disks, they are also on 360 disks but we dont list those in this wiki. The games listed are examples, its known for sure more disks can have these numbers and further research can be done, to determine the meaning. It is rumoured it might be a version string of some sorts slowly raising in xbox years old"

These numbers could be the same across various discs and thus moot to include, but it might be an idea to add to discs as a comment if nothing else like we do for EA discs?

3

(4 replies, posted in Guests & account requests)

I have now submitted these discs via New Disc Form with a comment to attribute to ToXZiN (as he was unsure about the new disc form) to make submission easier.

I've seen the disc; ajshell said it looks potentially recoverable even if the scratch is deep, so we gotta hope wink

5

(2 replies, posted in Guests & account requests)

This is not something we do here. Game files are not shared in Redump, as we only preserve metadata, such as hashes, and ring information.

Redump does not provide game data. We are a library of game metadata (such as hashes and titles), not actual data repositories.

However, "opening games" differs per console - for example, for Nintendo-based consoles, to view their files use a tool such as WIT for Wii/GCN, CDecrypt/DiscU for WiiU, etc..

Redump does not provide game data. We are a library of game metadata (such as hashes and titles), not actual data repositories.

Please can I request a wiki account, same username and email as my main Redump account ^^

This would greatly help with submissions, especially when users like I who are inexperienced at dumping certain games (like IBM PC ones) feel that manually submitting is a burden  on my time and adds pressure to a task that's meant to help preserve games.