MAME32 was a popular, now-obsolete graphical user interface (GUI) front-end for the MAME (Multiple Arcade Machine Emulator) project. Developed primarily for the Microsoft Windows operating system, it was one of the first widely adopted versions of MAME that did not require users to interact with a command line, significantly lowering the barrier to entry for arcade emulation during the late 1990s and early 2000s.
| | MAME Team (with GUI work by Chris Kirmse and others) | | :--- | :--- | | Initial Release | 1998 | | Final Stable Release | 0.106 (2006) / Unofficial builds continued to 0.162 | | Operating System | Windows 9x, NT, 2000, XP, Vista, 7 (32-bit) | | Type | Emulator front-end | | License | MAME license (non-commercial, source-available) | | Successor | MAMEUI (officially), QMC2, MAMEUIFX | History and Development The original MAME was a command-line program. To play a game, a user had to open a terminal (or Windows Command Prompt) and type commands with specific flags and ROM names (e.g., mame pacman ). This was intimidating for non-technical users. MAME32