For the ROM, the official, unheadered hash values are: CRC32: 3322EFFC MD5: 03A63945398191337E896E5771F77173 SHA-1: E7E852F0159CE612E3911164878A9B08B3CB9060 Why Is This Specific Checksum Required?
To confirm you have the correct ROM, you can verify it using two distinct checksums: a link to the past j 10 rom with crc 3322effc updated
Ensure your emulator (such as RetroArch, Snes9x, or bsnes) is updated to the latest version to properly support patched ROM headers and modern hacks. To help you get exactly what you need, let me know: For the ROM, the official, unheadered hash values
If you have a different version of the ROM (such as the US 1.1), I can help you find information on the hacks compatible with that version instead. Share public link Share public link : The popular SM/ALttP Combo
: The popular SM/ALttP Combo Randomizer often requires this specific Japanese ROM as a base to ensure compatibility with the randomization logic. Technical Verification
When Nintendo launched A Link to the Past on the Super Famicom in Japan on November 21, 1991, the initial production run contained the "v1.0" version of the game data. When this cartridge is dumped digitally into an .sfc or .smc file format and stripped of any copier headers (making it "headerless"), it produces a universal cryptographic identity check called a Cyclic Redundancy Check (CRC) with the value . Technical Specifications Table Value / Detail Game Title Zelda no Densetsu - Kamigami no Triforce (Japan) Revision Version 1.0 (Rev 0) CRC32 Hash 3322EFFC MD5 Hash 03A63945398191337E896E5771F77173 File Size 1,048,576 Bytes (Exactly 1.00 MB / 8 Megabits) Header Type Headerless (No-Intro standard) Why the 1.0 Japanese Version Matters
When working with retro emulation and digital archiving, maintaining an "updated" environment means keeping your emulation cores, patching tools, and randomizer clients current—not altering the core ROM data itself.