The project uses a custom technology stack to simulate a 2000s-era internet environment on modern computers.
For more technical details or to contribute to the preservation efforts, you can visit the project's GitHub repository or join their community Discord .
: Diagrams representing how metadata (titles, developers, release dates) is stored and linked within the project's SQLite database. Understanding Flashpoint Preservation
: Step-by-step guides for "curators"—the volunteers who find and save games—showing the process from initial discovery to final database entry.
: Intercepts requests for external assets (like sound files or extra levels) and serves them from the local archive instead.
: Visual maps showing how the Flashpoint Launcher interacts with the local database and internal proxy systems to bypass "site locks" (code that prevents games from running outside their original website).
: Integrated software like Flash Player Pro or specialized emulators like Ruffle that run the legacy code securely.
The project uses a custom technology stack to simulate a 2000s-era internet environment on modern computers.
For more technical details or to contribute to the preservation efforts, you can visit the project's GitHub repository or join their community Discord . Flashpoint.Diagrams.7z
: Diagrams representing how metadata (titles, developers, release dates) is stored and linked within the project's SQLite database. Understanding Flashpoint Preservation The project uses a custom technology stack to
: Step-by-step guides for "curators"—the volunteers who find and save games—showing the process from initial discovery to final database entry. : Integrated software like Flash Player Pro or
: Intercepts requests for external assets (like sound files or extra levels) and serves them from the local archive instead.
: Visual maps showing how the Flashpoint Launcher interacts with the local database and internal proxy systems to bypass "site locks" (code that prevents games from running outside their original website).
: Integrated software like Flash Player Pro or specialized emulators like Ruffle that run the legacy code securely.