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Maker Creates Raspberry Pi Pico Powered PlayStation Memory Card

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The best Raspberry Pi projects (opens in new tab) are the ones that address a need we didn’t know we had, and that’s certainly the case with this incredibly clever PlayStation memory card hack from Daniele Giuliani (opens in new tab), which uses a Raspberry Pi Pico (opens in new tab) board to fully emulate the console’s memory card, adding a USB interface so game saves can be copied on and off.

Say the words ‘memory card’ today and you probably think of half a terabyte of micro SD card, enough to lose your entire music library down the back of the couch, but once upon a time they were decidedly chunkier in build and with a single megabyte of capacity. The memory cards that were used for saving game data on the original PlayStation console, launched in 1995 outside Japan, were this odd mix of small and large, but thanks to Guiliani and his Raspberry Pi Pico, they can at least be backed up. The PlayStation and other CD based consoles relied on these cards in order for gamers to save their progress, high scores and best times in Gran Turismo.



The best Raspberry Pi projects (opens in new tab) are the ones that address a need we didn’t know we had, and that’s certainly the case with this incredibly clever PlayStation memory card hack from Daniele Giuliani (opens in new tab), which uses a Raspberry Pi Pico (opens in new tab) board to fully emulate the console’s memory card, adding a USB interface so game saves can be copied on and off.

Say the words ‘memory card’ today and you probably think of half a terabyte of micro SD card, enough to lose your entire music library down the back of the couch, but once upon a time they were decidedly chunkier in build and with a single megabyte of capacity. The memory cards that were used for saving game data on the original PlayStation console, launched in 1995 outside Japan, were this odd mix of small and large, but thanks to Guiliani and his Raspberry Pi Pico, they can at least be backed up. The PlayStation and other CD based consoles relied on these cards in order for gamers to save their progress, high scores and best times in Gran Turismo.

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