mame neogeo -verbose Or check the :

Here’s a helpful, accurate blog-style post about — written for retro gamers, emulator enthusiasts, and Raspberry Pi users (since 0.78 is the version used in RetroPie). Understanding MAME 0.78 BIOS: What You Need to Know If you’ve ever tried to run an arcade game in MAME 0.78 and got a black screen, missing graphics, or a “ROM not found” error, chances are you were missing a BIOS file.

Example structure:

MAME 0.78 is a very specific but popular version of MAME, largely because it’s the default version used in (the Raspberry Pi emulation image). Let’s break down what BIOS files are, which ones you need, and how to use them correctly. What Is a BIOS in MAME? A BIOS (Basic Input/Output System) file in MAME is a small piece of code dumped from original arcade hardware — often from a separate ROM chip on the actual arcade board.

If you take a neogeo.zip from MAME 0.200, it with MAME 0.78. Files inside the zip change over time (different hashes, renamed files, different dumps).

However, these popular systems require BIOS files in MAME 0.78: