In the vast library of the original Sony PlayStation, few licensed titles manage to transcend their source material. Jackie Chan: Stuntmaster is one of those rare gems. Released in 2000 by Radical Entertainment (known later for Prototype and The Simpsons: Hit & Run ), this 3D beat-‘em-up captured the slapstick, improvisational flair of Hong Kong cinema.
For the modern retro gaming archivist, however, the file name represents more than just a download. It represents the gold standard of digital preservation—compressed, lossless, and region-specific. Jackie Chan Stuntmaster -USA-.chd
| Feature | BIN/CUE | CHD | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Large (650 MB) | Small (250-300 MB) | | Compression | None (Lossless) | High (Lossless) | | Audio Tracks | Separate files | Chunked inside one file | | Emulator Support | Universal | DuckStation, RetroArch, MAME, PCSX2 | | Metadata | None | Built-in hashing (Redump verified) | The Benefits for Stuntmaster Jackie Chan Stuntmaster relies heavily on Red Book audio (CD quality music) and streaming voice lines. CHD compresses these audio tracks without losing fidelity. You can store your entire PS1 library on a 128GB USB drive instead of a 2TB hard drive. How to Convert or Use a CHD If you have the original BIN/CUE, you can convert it using chdman (MAME tool): In the vast library of the original Sony
As you build your PlayStation library, remember: respect the preservation. Hunt for the Redump-verified USA CHD, pair it with a good CRT shader, and enjoy one of the best movie-licensed games ever made. For the modern retro gaming archivist, however, the