HEY! This is a recreation of a page from BadGraph1csGhost's website. They seem to have left Neocities for some reason, but left this page live on their site; while I assume they probably have no plans to kill the page, I don't know that for a fact and the links they compiled are super useful in today's age, so I'll be re-linking them here for the sake of preservation of knowledge. I HAVE NOT TESTED ALL OF THE PROGRAMS AND SERVICES IN THIS LIST! Therefore, I cannot attest to their veracity or their SAFETY! However, BGG seemed to be really knowledgeable about these things and I'm sure they understood what all this stuff was, so I will not omit anything that still leads to a functional page. USE AT YOUR OWN RISK (but I'm sure they're fine). Everything past this point is a recreation of their HTML and is not necessarily my own writing/thoughts/opinions/sarcastic annotations. If you somehow find this page, thank you for compiling all these resources, BGG.
Helpful software for composers, gamers, and the average computer user; with a special emphasis on free and open-source.
Do you like what you see? Do you hate it? Do better! Make your own site today!
YOUR WEBSITE'S TITLE HERE. Bogleech's public domain HTML document that you can customise by simply opening it in Notepad++.
W3 Schools. Guides and tutorials for every step of web development, including the advanced stuff.
MDN Web Docs. Learn HTML directly from Mozilla. Make sure to paste this into your uBlock Origin filters first...developer.mozilla.org##li.top-level-entry-container:nth-of-type(7)
Neocities. Web host with 1024 MB storage for free accounts; 50 GB for supporters.
Catbox. Secure file host; 200 MB limit per file (useless for piracy, useful for webmasters). [HOVER CURSOR HERE]
Internet Archive. Public file host; allows others to access files you upload.
Every great composer had to start somewhere. These resources will allow you to build your first studio and sound like a pro without having to spend anything.
Audacity v.3.0.2. The last version of the world's best FOSS audio editor before the bunglesome takeover by music technology monopoly, Muse Group.
FL Studio. Free unlimited trial, full VST compatibility in trial mode. The only problems are that you will not be able to load existing project files, save presets in any Image-Line plugins, or export to MIDI. Also, Image-Line website will autoload when you exit.
LMMS. Free and open source with some VST compatibility. Bigtime pro audio plugins won't work with it and compatibility with macOS is sort of sketchy. Supports SF2 (soundfont) files, compatible with Hydrogen *.H2SONG format.
Hydrogen. Free and open source Fairlight CMI Page R style sample sequencer.
E-MU Emulator X3. Abandonware, full version of this once industry-leading software. Standalone and VST compatible, it might even work in LMMS. Windows only, but can be convinced with Wine to run on Linux. All the Sound Central instrument libraries are also abandonware and available from the Internet Archive.
Plogue sforzando. Freeware soundfont player with some limited sampling abilities (drag a single WAV file onto the workspace to import it as audio). Standalone and VST2/VST3/AAX/AU compatible.
DecentSampler. Freeware Kontakt-like sample bank player. Pianobook has a lot of free sample banks for it.
Spitfire Audio LABS. Freeware sample bank player with loads of broadcast-quality sample banks, including a versatile full-keyboard strings ensemble and grand piano. You have to download the Spitfire Audio software first, then use it to grab the LABS banks you want from their database. Account required, but no payment info or personally-identifying data is asked for. VST2/VST3/AAX/AU compatible. May run properly on LMMS with a sufficiently fast CPU.
Polyphone. Soundfont editor. Not a VSTi, but might provide greater stability than sforzando for problematic soundfonts. Windows, Mac, and Linux.
Internet Archive. The largest repository of soundfonts on the internet at the moment. Ignore all files except .SF2, .SFZ, and .SFARK!
Musical-Artifacts. The second-largest repository of soundfonts on the internet (back from the dead!)
Emulating console games on your computer gives you access to all the thousands of games that no giant corporate outfit is ever going to release again.
Atari
VCS/2600. Stella
400/800/5200. Atari800 Emulator
7800 SuperSystem. A7800
ST. Hatari
Lynx. Handy
Jaguar. BigPEmu
SEGA
All 8- and 16-bit consoles and their add-ons. Kega Fusion
Saturn. Mednafen
Dreamcast. Flycast
Nintendo
NES. Nestopia
Super NES. Snes9x
Game Boy/Color/Advance. VisualBoyAdvance-M
Nintendo 64 (legacy video card). Project64 1.6-2.1(anything newer than this is malware)
Nintendo 64 (Vulkan-compatible video card). [Previously linked to the Simple64 emulator, but it seems to have disappeared from GitHub!]
Nintendo 64 (video chipset). M64Py
GameCube/Wii. Dolphin
Nintendo DS. MelonDS
Wii U. Cemu
Sony
PlayStation. DuckStation
PlayStation 2. PCSX2
PlayStation 3. RPCS3
PSP. PPSSPP
PS Vita. Vita3K
Microsoft
MD DOS. D-Fend Reloaded
XBOX. xemu
Wii. Use Wilbrand to unlock your standard Wii.
Wii Mini. Just because you can't connect to the internet doesn't mean you can't hack your Wii Mini (warning: Linux is required for this process).
Wii U. Follow the instructions precisely to reduce the risk of a brick to almost 0%.
Nintendo 3DS. Instructions for all the various and sundry firmware (and hardware) revisions.
MyAbandonware. Neglected and forgotten MS-DOS and Windows games.
Myrient.
Abandonware uploaders (Internet Archive)
CVLT OF MIRRORS⮟ COMING VERY SOON BCUZ I NEED TO SLEEP RIGHT NOW ⮟