VOGONS


First post, by Gemini000

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So... my System Shock 2 playthrough just came to a screeching halt due to two-thirds of the first four hours of gameplay getting broken. The MP4 file just completely refuses to load in everything and every repair program I've run it through is telling me there's no video data, despite the file being over 4 GB large.

Re-recording this is not an option because if I attempt to do so, the reaction from me won't be genuine and thus will be very boring to watch. Also, I can't simply return to a previous save so I'd have to start from scratch and again, reactions won't be genuine because I already played through the first four hours.

Any ideas, or is this ADG Plays gonna be a write-off until sometime next year when I can try it again? x_x;

(Side Note: This ENTIRE week has been sort of crappy and I kinda just wanna go crawl into a corner and never come out. I've wasted over 60 hours of my life over the past week because of things which broke immediately and I couldn't fix, broke later and couldn't fix, or broke much later because of something else and again, couldn't fix... SIXTY HOURS... SERIOUSLY...)

--- Kris Asick (Gemini)
--- Pixelmusement Website: www.pixelships.com
--- Ancient DOS Games Webshow: www.pixelships.com/adg

Reply 1 of 7, by Beegle

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I've seen small miracles with this little converter tool : Pazera FLV to AVI version 1.2
Don't use later versions, they only accept FLV files. This version accepts mostly everything that is decodable by your computer/installed codecs.

It's not an Mpeg repair tool per se, but it's sometimes forgiving when reading input data. Just drag and drop the file in the main section. Set your parameters and click on convert.

The video bitrate is set to 1000kbit/s by default, so don't forget to change it.

The more sound cards, the better.
AdLib documentary : Official Thread
Youtube Channel : The Sound Card Database

Reply 2 of 7, by brassicGamer

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If you have access to a Mac then ffmpegX has many cool features including repair.

Check out my blog and YouTube channel for thoughts, articles, system profiles, and tips.

Reply 3 of 7, by Gemini000

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Beegle wrote:
I've seen small miracles with this little converter tool : Pazera FLV to AVI version 1.2 Don't use later versions, they only acc […]
Show full quote

I've seen small miracles with this little converter tool : Pazera FLV to AVI version 1.2
Don't use later versions, they only accept FLV files. This version accepts mostly everything that is decodable by your computer/installed codecs.

It's not an Mpeg repair tool per se, but it's sometimes forgiving when reading input data. Just drag and drop the file in the main section. Set your parameters and click on convert.

The video bitrate is set to 1000kbit/s by default, so don't forget to change it.

No luck. It won't open the video file. (Strangely though, it detects it as being only about 600 MB big when the actual file size is over 4 1/2 GB.)

brassicGamer wrote:

If you have access to a Mac then ffmpegX has many cool features including repair.

I'm not on a Mac but I do have access to ffmpeg, but it won't even open the file. :/

--- Kris Asick (Gemini)
--- Pixelmusement Website: www.pixelships.com
--- Ancient DOS Games Webshow: www.pixelships.com/adg

Reply 4 of 7, by PhilsComputerLab

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Sorry that happened to you. I don't have a solution, but can relate. Once I did a super long video of me setting up a machine, just to find out I didn't capture the voice over 😵

YouTube, Facebook, Website

Reply 5 of 7, by Beegle

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Gemini000 wrote:

No luck. It won't open the video file.

Hm. Maybe if you upload the file somewhere maybe we could give a shot at it, individually?

Gemini000 wrote:

...it detects it as being only about 600 MB big

Strange indeed. Maybe there's an error at that exact point. Were you using capture software, or a capture card?

edit :
I also just thought... you could try uploading it as-is to your youtube channel, see if their server recognizes it. If it does, then maybe you could redownload it in HD.

Last edited by Beegle on 2015-12-28, 04:56. Edited 1 time in total.

The more sound cards, the better.
AdLib documentary : Official Thread
Youtube Channel : The Sound Card Database

Reply 6 of 7, by ZanQuance

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Sorry you've been having a rotten week, I've had plenty this year myself and know how much a small bit of success can make all the difference.
What you need to do is fix the files header information, then those tools can do their magic on the frames inside.

I would make a copy of the file, then I would open the file in a Hex editor and take a look inside to make sure it's got data and not just an empty file of zeroes.
Then look up the file's header format and fix it manually, and finally parse the file with a tool that can either repair the file or encode it to another format.

AviDemux might help

Reply 7 of 7, by Snayperskaya

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Have you tried FormatFactory yet? Since it works with almost every video format available ("from" and "to") it might be worth a try.