Snes Roms Archive Verified | All

We define the target set as:

You will often see two competing standards: GoodSNES (part of the GoodTools suite) and No-Intro.

| Feature | GoodSNES | No-Intro | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Focus | Hacks, translations, overdumps | Pure retail cartridges | | Verification | Loose standard (often includes bad dumps) | Strict cryptographic hashes | | Filenames | Messy (e.g., Game [!] [h1C] [t1]) | Clean, standard Nintendo naming | | Purpose | Playing on emulators 20 years ago | Accurate preservation | all snes roms archive verified

Verdict: If you want a "verified" archive for historical accuracy or running on FPGA hardware (like MiSTer or Analogue Super NT), always choose No-Intro. GoodSets are fun for discovering bootlegs, but they are not "verified" in the academic sense.

If you want, I can produce:


An archive of "all verified SNES ROMs" typically includes three major regions. According to current No-Intro data (as of the latest 2025 dumps), the numbers break down as follows:

| Region | Number of Verified ROMs | Notable Exclusions | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | USA (North America) | ~721 | Competition carts (e.g., Donkey Kong Country Competition) | | Japan (Super Famicom) | ~1,450 | Satellaview (BS-X) games are often separate | | Europe / PAL | ~520 | Translated text; slower 50Hz versions | We define the target set as: You will

Total unique verified games (non-duplicate): Approximately 1,755 to 1,800 distinct titles.

You need a roadmap. Go to the official No-Intro website or their repository on Internet Archive (where they legally host DAT files). Download the "Nintendo - Super Nintendo Entertainment System (SNES).dat" file. An archive of "all verified SNES ROMs" typically