Difference between revisions of "MegaSWF"
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(Adding the Wayback website screenshot: File:MegaSWF-20120712081326.png.) |
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| url = {{url|1=http://www.MegaSWF.com/}} | | url = {{url|1=http://www.MegaSWF.com/}} | ||
| project_status = {{offline}} | | project_status = {{offline}} | ||
| archiving_status = {{lost}} | | archiving_status = {{lost}} (partially saved by Wayback Machine.) | ||
}} | }} | ||
Revision as of 11:04, 26 April 2019
MegaSWF | |
URL | http://www.MegaSWF.com/[IA•Wcite•.today•MemWeb] |
Status | Offline |
Archiving status | Lost (partially saved by Wayback Machine.) |
Archiving type | Unknown |
IRC channel | #archiveteam-bs (on hackint) |
MegaSWF was a media file hoster that started off as ShockWave Flash hoster, similar to Newgrounds.
MegaSWF escaped the radar of ArchiveTeam entirely and perished in silence.[1]
MegaSWF was a big repository of amateur-made minigames, fangames and flash files that Newgrounds does not have.
MegaSWF later turned into an universal file host (also used for EXE, AVI, WMV, MP4), but still focussed on SWF minigames.
Archival
MegaSWF is partially but incompletely available on the Wayback Machine.
The home page has initially been captured by the Wayback Machine's crawler on Saturday, July 26th 2008, 10h:04m:35s UTC.