Difference between revisions of "Cinepak"
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==Magazine articles== | ==Magazine articles== | ||
{{mainArticle|{{PAGENAME}}/Magazine articles}} | {{mainArticle|{{PAGENAME}}/Magazine articles}} | ||
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+ | ==Documentation== | ||
+ | <gallery> | ||
+ | CinepakforSegaCDUsersGuide 1993-12-10 Tengen.pdf|User's Guide (1993-12-10; with covering letter for [[Tengen]]) | ||
+ | </gallery> | ||
==References== | ==References== |
Revision as of 13:40, 21 November 2022
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Cinepak is a video codec developed by SuperMatch, a division of SuperMac Technologies (later acquired by computer hardware firm, Radius in 1994), and released in 1992 as part of Apple Computer's Quicktime video suite. It was designed to encode 320x240 resolution video at 1x (150 kbyte/s) CD-ROM transfer rates. The codec was ported to the Windows platform in 1993, and was also used in many early CD-ROM game consoles, including as the Atari Jaguar CD, Sega Mega-CD (and Sega Mega-CD 32X, Sega Saturn, and 3DO.
It was the primary video codec of early versions of QuickTime and Microsoft Video for Windows, but was later superseded by Sorenson Video, Intel Indeo, and improvements in MPEG and H.264. However, movies compressed with Cinepak are generally still playable in most media players, such as VLC media player. Cinepak files for Saturn titles have the extension CPK. The original name of this codec was CompactVideo, which is why its FourCC identifier is "CVID".
A large number of Mega-CD, Mega-CD 32X and particularly Saturn titles use Cinepak for full motion video, though in the latter's case, many developers opted for higher quality TrueMotion technology (or MPEG support offered by the Video CD Card) in system's later years. The retooled "Cinepak For Sega" became an unofficial standard across Sega consoles of the era, though was rendered obsolete when MPEG support was added to consoles (such as the Sega Dreamcast) as a standard.
Prior to Cinepak's introduction on the Mega-CD in late 1993, full motion video on the Mega-CD typically involved low resolution, "grainy" or "blocky" videos as developers had to create their own systems. Cinepak was meant to bring "full resolution" video to the system and allow for 128 colours to be displayed simultaneously (rather than the standard 64). There was talk of Cinepak titles selling at a higher price point as a result[1], but this does not appear to have materialised to any significant degree.
Contents
Technical information
Cinepak is based on vector quantization, which is a significantly different algorithm from the discrete cosine transform (DCT) algorithm used by most current codecs (in particular the MPEG family, as well as JPEG). This permitted implementation on relatively slow CPUs, but tended to result in blocky artifacting at low bitrates.
Cinepak divides a movie into key images and intra-coded images. Each image is divided into a number of horizontal bands which have individual 256-color palettes transferred in the key images. Each band is subdivided into 4x4 pixel blocks. The compressor uses vector quantization to determine the one or two band palette colors which best match each block and encodes runs of blocks as either one color byte or two color bytes plus a 16-bit vector which determines which pixel gets which color. The data rate can be controlled within a narrow range by adjusting the rate of key versus intra-coded frames and by adjusting the permitted error in each block and the block run-length.
Games which utilise Cinepak
- Note: incomplete
Mega-CD
- Bill Walsh College Football (1993)
- Cliffhanger (1993)[2]
- Dracula Unleashed (1993)
- Eternal Champions: Challenge From the Dark Side (1995)
- Fahrenheit
- Joe Montana's NFL Football (1993)
- Jurassic Park (1993)
- Mighty Morphin Power Rangers (Mega-CD) (1995) (Uses a heavily modified version of Cinepak)
- Surgical Strike
- Wirehead
Mega-CD 32X
Saturn
Note that many, but not all Japanese Saturn titles display Cinepak on the back of the case
- Baku Baku Animal
- Clockwork Knight
- D
- Die Hard Trilogy
- Doukyuusei if
- Farland Saga
- Godzilla Rettoushinkan
- Horror Tour
- Iron Storm
- Jewels of the Oracle
- Jinzou Ningen Hakaider: Last Judgement
- Lunar Silver Star Story
- Mighty Hits
- Myst
- My Best Friends: St. Andrew Jogakuin Hen
- Nanatsu no Hikan
- Okudera Yasuhiko no Sekai wo Mezase! Soccer Kids: Nyuumon Hen
- Phantasm
- Pia Carrot e Youkoso!!
- Prisoner of Ice: Jashin Kourin
- Quantum Gate I: Akumu no Joshou
- R?MJ The Mystery Hospital
- Rampo
- Return to Zork
- Robo Pit
- Sega Worldwide Soccer 97
- Space Jam
- Tama: Adventurous Ball in Giddy Labyrinth
- The Mansion of Hidden Souls
- The Psychotron
- Tomb Raider
- Virtuacall S
- Virtua Cop
- Winning Post 2 Program '96
- World Advanced Daisenryaku: Sakusen File
Windows PC
Magazine articles
- Main article: Cinepak/Magazine articles.
Documentation
User's Guide (1993-12-10; with covering letter for Tengen)