Optical disc images however are more often called disc images and seldom or never ROMs. I guess people mainly think about mask ROM chips when hearing "ROM".
I myself prefer "ROM image" for memory chips, "disk image" for magnetic disks and "disc image" for optical discs (or just skip "image" as Drag said if it's obvious by context). And maybe "cassette tape image" or "tape image" for cassette tapes but never "cassette image" (because cassette only is used for ROM/RAM cartridges in Swedish).
Another similar pet peeve of mine is when people use "RAM" when talking about EEPROM or flash-ROM. RAM to me is always volatile and can be written to directly while a PROM is ROM and therefore can't be written to directly but can be programmed in a slower process.
Yeah, those systems simply has a smaller cartridge library so mappers never became necessary. Though the NES does have an awful lot of mappers compared to later systems that were similarly popular, like the Game Boy. I guess it was because Nintendo didn't regulate cartridge production as much as on later consoles.turboxray wrote: Tue Sep 16, 2025 8:54 am Probably not media related, but often SMS (and even A8 and C64) fan-groups like to gripe about the "mappers" on NES.. because "that's cheating". And you obviously need to remove mappers from the capability for a more fair comparison between consoles. /s Oh sweet summer child, you.