ROM Archive
The complete Roms Portal catalog — consoles from the golden era of gaming, organized by platform, genre, and region. Filter to find exactly what you're looking for.
2 ROMs
Half-Life DC SEGA Dreamcast ROM DownloadHalf-Life DC is the unreleased SEGA Dreamcast port of the legendary first-person shooter originally built by Valve for PC. Sierra Studios planned the release for 2001, with Gearbox Software and Captivation Digital Laboratories handling the conversion work. The project promised to bring the full Black Mesa experience to console players, complete with the story of Gordon Freeman, a theoretical physicist caught in a catastrophic resonance cascade. Players fight through alien creatures, hostile marines, and collapsing research facilities using a wrench, pistols, shotguns, and the iconic crossbow. Although Sierra cancelled the retail release late in development, fan groups recovered near-final builds and distributed them as ROM files for emulation. The port carried smoother textures than the PC original and adjusted controls for the Dreamcast pad. This version remains a fascinating piece of console history that shows how close Valve's masterpiece came to reaching a wider home audience through SEGA's final hardware platform during its short commercial life.
Quake III Arena DC SEGA Dreamcast ROM DownloadQuake III Arena DC is a first-person shooter released for the SEGA Dreamcast in 2000. The game was developed by id Software with the Dreamcast port handled by Raster Productions, and SEGA published it for home consoles. Unlike previous Quake titles, this entry strips away the single-player campaign and focuses entirely on fast arena combat against bots or human opponents. Players pick from a roster of characters, each with their own look and personality, then jump into matches built around speed, precision aiming, and quick decisions. The Dreamcast version is notable for being one of the first console shooters to support full online play through the SegaNet service. Keyboard and mouse support was also included, giving Dreamcast owners a true PC-style control option on a home console. The game runs smoothly at a steady frame rate and keeps the bright, sharp visuals that made the original PC release stand out among shooters of its era.