This is why I share the complete GameFAQs archive. It's art, it's useful, it's free of ads, and I have precious memories from the discussion boards. That archive and emulators will keep me entertained forever.
Y2K Memes
The Memiverse:
!90s_memes@quokk.au
!philosophymemes@quokk.au
!sigh_fi@quokk.au
is this a kiwix archive? I'd like to add that to the Library!
Doesn't appear to be, I found it in torrent form. Is there a process for submitting it to kiwix? Or would you just like the torrent?
there is a process, but i haven't looked into that yet. torrent will work too!
To anyone else interested, reply to this comment for the archive!
I'll take it please, Brazilian ISPs are extremely open to torrenting so I can seed indefinitely.
Replying
That sounds like a great thing to keep alive as the net continues to enshittify
How big is it?
Around 2.3 GB, all of .txts!
nfo file art feels like a lost form.
That and keygen music
The chiptune scene is more than alive and well.
A lost space and time, never to be reclaimed. Never be afraid to start another movement
I miss written guides. If I look something up for a video game, it's usually a discrete question that I want a quick answer for, which is something that YouTube video guides are uniquely terrible at providing. And there are practically no written guides after a certain date. It's awful.
I'll say that the one thing LLMs have improved is that Google's AI Search can answer a lot of questions for me without making me watch a fucking video. But I'd still prefer a labor of love text file FAQ.
it's usually a discrete question that I want a quick answer for, which is something that YouTube video guides are uniquely terrible at providing.
Have a question about how to do/find something
Only resources are YT videos no shorter than 15 minutes.
5 minutes are intro with the guy telling his life.
5 minutes are teasing about the response and going in circles in the map.
10 seconds for a short answer that sometimes it doesn’t help at all. (How to find the legendary fish in the fishing mechanic of the open world game? Go to water and catch it)
5 minutes of outro.
Well, if you have a better way to get you to watch 12 ads, I'd like to hear it.
Even looking up a simple walk-through is impossible now, all you can find is slop.
Hell yeah, unsung heroes of a bygone era
Even today, if I'm stuck in a game, especially an older one, I'll check for a guide like this first. So much more pleasant than the SEO slop you get by googling, and a better experience than sifting through video.
It's pretty hit or miss for anything newer. But for classic games, those resources are still super valuable.
Yeah, you just Ctrl+F for what you need instead of clicking through 10+ pages.
Oh the memories of the Game FAQS for The Secret of Monkey Island. In fact all the Monkey games. In fact all the LucasArts games.
Such a Golden Era of PC adventures!
What I miss about these walk-throughs is that the complete lack of hyperlinks and images made finding the help you needed feel like its own challenge. I remember getting stuck in Ocarina of Time in the early 2000s, and interpreting complex directions for a puzzle in a 3 dimensional space without any visual aids was still tough. I played Twilight Princess for the first time a decade later, and the one time I got stuck I just watched a guy on YouTube solve it. Copying him felt pretty unsatisfying.
I liked that I could ctrl+f < thing I want to know about> and go right to it instead of having to jump around in a 20 minute video for a 2 minute thing.
Heck I remember ones that had specific chapter codes so you could find that code to get to that specific chapter
Yeah, that's a good way to put it. The FAQ advice felt like a treasure map you followed, which helped feel like you were still "solving" the thing since you needed to engage your brain (and it separately felt rewarding to succeed).
To be honest, watching YouTube and following along isn't even the low effort version in 2025 - That's reserved for just watching a Let's Play and not even ever playing the game.
It's was an unwritten requirement when configuring Cisco switches in the 00s too. Not sure of it still is, I haven't touched a router in 15 years.
A lot of front end devs hid it in webpage source too.
My homepage still has it.
Dingojellybean (at) hellokitty (dot) com
Where are you now, dingojellybean? What have you seen?
This is the stuff LLMs should have been trained on.
To be fair they probably were
True! But I'm pretty sure most, if not all, LLMs remove all whitespace as, like, step zero of their process as they tokenize stuff. So the LLM is literally blind to the data this contains.
So you're saying we need to return to the 2000s and start communicating with ASCII art to stop AI scrapers? In.
The great thing is that all the guides that were good back then are STILL good today for their respective games. Except one or two for MMORPGs I guess
I've just realised what's annoying me about this. Shouldn't the (XI) on the left be (IX)? The numbers are a clock face yeah?
I'm unfamiliar with the game so maybe this is done on purpose.
Didn't notice it until you said something, but yeah, you're completely correct.
Here's the original box art, if you're interested. Chrono Trigger is a pretty good game, even today, I recommend being interested in it.
No, you are correct. Well spotted.

You should write to Dingo Jellybean (dingojellybean@hellokitty.com) and let them know.
If you ever want to experience a classic JRPG, this is the one you should try.
Dingo jellybean doing the lords work.
That person potentially owned hellokity.com in 1999!
There was a Sanrio site where anyone could make a hellokitty.com email for a number of years
How does one even go about making something like this? I've never seen any guides or dedicated ASCII artists.
There was software for it. Both painting apps and image to ascii apps.
Version: Last
Hah
Still an all time great game, too.
Oh I used this guide like three weeks ago, lol.