The red screen of death is iconic for many people. You put a wrong disk in, it drags you to hell , warns you to but a PlayStation or PlayStation disk in.
@@italianogeorgianomonoposto Imagine being a kid with an overactive imagination putting a scratched game disk in the system. That's what made it scary for us.
There’s a chance that the dead battery could leak, but apparently the wrapping around PS2 CMOSes can make this potential damage/occurrence a little less destructive. I’ll be replacing my dead one when I later will crack into that particular Slimline model I have (with a dying laser and dead CMOS). I might as well do it while I’m in there!! XXD But I’m pretty paranoid though, so that’s just me XXD
This video actually helped me figure out what was wrong with my PS2. Thought it was just freezing up but apparently the CMOS battery is dead. Good thing I have some laying around.
Unfortunately they need to come with their own set of wires soldered into it for a proper replacement. I just reused the old battery’s connector on the new one with plenty of tape and seemed stable enough.
I like how the on the DVD errors the Phat model is more Articulate with “Play halted due to malfunction” and the slim be straight forward “This disc cannot be played”
3:51 The DVD Error is the scariest because it has no sound at all. Just complete silence, pitch-black, and one sentence. It is absolutely terrifying, especially on the PS2 Phat, where it refers to the error as a 'malfunction'.
Now that I think about it again, the RSOD is only scary on the entrance, the ambience sounds like the sea.. and I am thankful enough I never had the PS1, sparing me from the infamous Fearful Harmony and Personified Fear.
I would have agreed with you on the PS1, but I saw a comment over 6 years ago that I still think about to this day, comparing the sound to the portals in Spyro, and I haven’t been able to unhear that ever since, so it doesn’t really creep me out anymore.
Just see the clock in the dead CMOS battery scene, it stopped at 12:00:00 AM It means that those orbs move with the ticking of the internal clock of PS2 As in computers , CMOS battery give enough power to the motherboard to keep save of bios profile and clock config That's why those orbs stop moving in the UI of PS2
The reason a PS2 with a dead CMOS battery doesn't have the orbs spin is that the animation phase that the orbs show is based off the current CMOS time. In other words, if you don't see the orbs spinning when you enter the menu, it means you have a dead CMOS battery.
After some weeks I turned on my +10 years old PS2, and it has the dead CMOS Battery animation, hahah. Gladly game saving and playing keeps working flawlessly
@KezKaz I wonder if you change the time on a ps2 with a dead cmos battery, the dots would change position but still wont move because it’s... dead. The dots would just update to whatever you set it. But if you reset the system it would reset the time and also reset the dots back into the middle. Now this is just a guess I would be surprised if I’m actually correct.
The CMOS error isn't technically an error screen. The orbs move in correspondence to the passage of time and the battery is what keeps track of time. Without the battery, time essentially doesn't exist, so the orbs get confused & stay in their default position.
My theory is how the orbs move when you hover on system date is the orbs uses power from the plug so it makes it look like the CMOS battery is alive again. Another theory might be because of the system CMOS battery may have a little bit of power but had to stop because the system cannot recognize the battery's life.
Mine just died. Is it ok to not replace the battery and just keep it as it is? I hope there is no risk to keeping a dead battery in the console if all it does is tell time.
@@SharonisCarin321 Just don't if you want to save money. If you want, Open the console and find the dead CMOS battery holder, go replace it. Requirements is a professional and a working CMOS battery.
To me I think cmos one is the scariest of them all. With the cmos, everything looks so alive but without the cmos, everything looks dead and just gives a eerie feeling for some reason, especially with the sound effects behind it.
Not gonna lie, I was terrified and worried about my own life when I was a kid alone in my grandma house.. Everybody left for a while and me just getting FOREVER traumatized 💀
So I am not the only one who found these errors SO creepy? I am still wondering who thought displaying the errors in this way was a good idea, haha. To be honest, everything about the UI of the PS2 always looked creepy to me. The main menu, with the blue orbs spinning around, disturbingly calmly, like the end is near, like complete, utter emptiness has come to stay, like there's nothing more to reach... absolute loneliness. And the black background to strengthen the feeling. Then the menu with the memory card and the disc, with such silence, and a lonely little white dot occasionally going through the screen, like it's all that is left in this isolated world. So, so creepy. And just in case, it's not sarcasm. I am trying to finally put to rest one of the things that scared me the most as a kid.
Piraticaphobia (Pronounced Per-ridi-ca Phobia) (From the latin term, "Piratica" meaning "Piracy") is the fear of anti-piracy and/or error screens. Jeez
Yeah no the startup screen used to freak the hell out of me as a kid, and still kinda does. And the system just has this tension to it that’s hard to describe
I was recently playing on my PS2 with my 7-year old sister. We ended up getting a RSoD while playing and somehow she didn't got scared by it. I'm honestly shocked since i almost crapped myself when i first saw it at the same age as her.
I won't forget the RSOD one😨 That shit almost ruined my childhood I remember being 5-6 yo I saw it and I was alone in my room at night. I was really scared after that, I mean REALLY Scared and since then I had a phobia of any TVs, Screens, Play Stations and even PCs. I still see nightmares of being in that red hell with that shitty ambient sfx after a whole 12 years
@@youtube_channel_1111 i still do but only of like old tvs (CRTs) and old consoles which sucks cause i love retro games, so i just have to face my fears
@@Boliever10 SAME!! I always thought I was the only one... I don't even know where it originated from, but old tech scares the shit out of me. I find it so fascinating but once a friend and I tried to fix their record player and it was so scary to me that I felt like I would get a panic attack any minute... It sucks so much
I was legit terrified as if I'm gonna die when I was a kid or that PS2 is alive and the Red screen represents its Blood like it dying and suffering for eternity 😭😭
@@AverageMD-Fan21 I'm not so sure about that since I no longer own a physical copy, but maybe there's a copy I can buy at one of those pawn shops that sell old video games; there's a few around where I live. I could probably pick one up and play it on an emulator.
@@shadaneanimates what a coincidence for you replying, i just got my hands on a ps2 copy of sonic heroes! it is from c.e.x though, so it has it's scratches and stuff. i tested if it worked, it fortunately did
The blue lights glitch out with a dead CMOS battery because they’re actually a clock face in disguise. Since the battery powers the clock, the lights are stuck at 12 AM
My cmos battery was actually dead and sulfated, it won't keep the time unless i keep the console plugged but the orbs always were moving even with the battery dead! probably because my ps2 90010 sets the time at 01/01/2000 everytime i unplugged it. I changed the CMOS last week, so now the original CMOS with 12 years will rest in peace. Gg.
6:36 Did you know if you also put a VCD in a PS2 that it will bring up the RSoD as the PS2 DVD player didn't support a specific MPEG which VCD requires. It's the same with PS1 except it only accepts CD-ROMs.
There's an odd error that occurs sometimes when you try to play a scratched bootleg ps2 copy of a game, it ends up playing a glitched ps1 playstation boot sequence for some reason and also the console freezes at that screen afterwards
might be because the console mistakes it as a PS1 disc and hands it off to the PS1 emulator, which in turn attempts to read the disc and throws up one of the PS1's many glitched error handlers
@@UtahShark8798no upload content about how the race is of harry legs and Biden quitting is all about it's wrong Biden quit running for president right? It is!!!! biden is not about letters hes got harry fucking legs so edit comments!
What would happen if you got a 1tb memory card and modded it to put it in, and then filled it with a completed save file of every single game on the ps2
The RSoD (Red Screen of Death) may startle people who had just got their PS2 (PlayStation 2). They may get used to it as they use it more. Many thanks, TiledMasterCube
CMOS and DVD errors in my opinion are the creepiest That frozen clock... that messages on a silent black screen... they are just eerie About the RSOD, I think I got used to it 😂😂😂
2:48 I have a PlayStation 2 like this menu and nothing appears except the settings and it is not set to the current year just /2000/1/1/ Does this mean I should lose hope in it working?
man i remembered when i first (and only) had the ps2 overheat. i was super weirded out until i put my hand on the console and realized how long it was sitting in direct sunlight
apparently its because " The CMOS error isn't technically an error screen. The orbs move in correspondence to the passage of time and the battery is what keeps track of time. Without the battery, time essentially doesn't exist, so the orbs get confused & stay in their default position. " -leon legend, also in this comment section
The CMOS controls the orbs, as well as the ones within the crystal clock in the settings screen, because the CMOS is responsible for the time. Without a working CMOS, the orbs’ “clock face” is stuck at 12, leaving them all frozen in place there. PSA: If you suspect your PS2 has a dead CMOS, it may be worth it to open your console up and either just take it out or go ahead and replace it; I’ve heard they can leak, and you definitely don’t want a corroded battery leak inside your system getting between you and your games. Best wishes everyone!
4:36 only appears after the 2001 Walt Disney Home Entertainment logo (Black background variation) fades to black. Sourced from the DVD release of Freaky Friday (2003) (THX) when played on a PS2 slim with parental controls built-in. 1. PS2 Startup 2. Parental Controls Screen 3. FBI Warning Screens 4. 2001 Walt Disney Home Entertainment logo (Black background variation) 5. “This disc cannot be played” error message
I can't understand why Sony decided to put entire graphics with moving parts when it comes to the RSOD but then it's just a blank screen or nothing at all for the others??
The RSOD scared me so badly I stopped playing on my PS2 for nearly a month! The story was that my cousin gave me a pirated disc of kingdom of hearts that my cousin somehow got from someone and when i put it in my phat PS2 it displayed the RSOD Which gave me nightmares for a whole week thinking that my PS2 was evil😂
Long time ago I had an error when I was playing "Asterix and Obelix XXL2: Mission Las Vegum": It was going normal, but suddenly the game crashed, and then it appears the Red Screen Of Death unexpectedly. It was kinda strange, but maybe it was because that game is a pirated copy, althought that screen always appears after the startup or after the "Playstation 2" logo, and not during the gameplay
I’m still surprised that people got scared of this screen when they were little 6:20 Me and my sister were small and we were so use to this screen cause one of the games we loved to play would always cause this screen 💀 then we’ll try our best to clean said disk
The dead cmos battery error seems to only happen to certain models, my ps2 slim (k chasis, scph-79001) had dead cmos battery, an that error never appeared, even after taking the battery out and booting the console with no battery
EDIT: Apparently the wrapping on the batteries makes the leaks less damaging, according to another source. So if you were going to open your PS2 (Slim seems easier to do this with?) for a general cleaning or other maintenance anyway, you might wanna do it then. But otherwise, it seems like you could just be A-OK👌 It’s very interesting! :D Just a warning, though: I’ve heard that dead CMOSes can potentially be prone to corroding and thus, leak into your console which can damage it. You’d probably want to avoid that for the sake of preserving your system, so it might be a worthwhile option to research how you can take it out and/or replace it. As for the Slimline models that I personally only owned and own, it seems to be a fairly easy process. I’m going to have to try it for myself once I get back home to help one of my slims with the dead battery! I’m no expert and I don’t know much about this, but I just wanted to spread this possibility I’ve heard about; and I mean, it couldn’t be *that* far from the truth, considering a CMOS is a battery like any other that’s probably capable of corrosion, right? XXD Well, good luck and best wishes with whatever happens!! 💙
I replaced the battery with no issue; no corrosion present either. All of my consoles fortunately have none of the typical “signs of age/death” with corrosion, worn out parts, etc… The worst one was my original Xbox with its absolutely ancient factory-original thermal paste (which required a special solvent to get off of the dye) and mildly thick coasting of dust. Which, for being as old as it is, wasn’t even that bad; a quick blow of compressed air and a paintbrush dusting later and she’s basically like new again. Lol.
I remember as a kid, I was terrified of my ps2. The sound it made filled me with anxiety. So I would frequently turn the console on before the tv so I could put in the disk I wanted and not listen to the start up sound. Then I’d wait 10 seconds before turning the tv on to play. I remember being absolutely terrified when I encountered the red screen of death because I accidentally smeared my hands on the disk. Thankfully I managed to fix it but that screen haunted my nightmares for a week lol
I actually own a 22-year-old PlayStation 2 that has a dead CMOS battery, like everyone else is saying, the system is working fine. The only issue is the time resets when it's powered off or unplugged. I don't plan to replace the battery till the console runs into an error that is either concerning or fatal. (Broken fans, broken disc drive, file corruption etc.) and I'll just replace both at the same time. as for I know right this second, the console is still going strong! 22 years old and no repairs yet.
EDIT: Apparently the wrapping on the batteries makes the leaks less damaging, according to another source. So if you were going to open your PS2 (Slim seems easier to do this with?) for a general cleaning or other maintenance anyway, you might wanna do it then. But otherwise, you probably shouldn’t even worry and it seems like you could just be A-OK👌 (And Sorry for my biiig ramble, I’m in my PS2 phase again XXDD) --- Hello, just wanted to let you know that if the battery is not removed, it may corrode and leak into the inside of your console, which can definitely cause problems. Corroded batteries are not something to be messed with, especially when it comes to a sensitive electronic such as a gaming console. I haven’t experienced this first hand, but I do have a dead CMOS in one of my PS2 Slims that I will replace as soon as I get home, because I’d rather not take a chance. I recently heard that it can happen 😅 I’m not sure if it really would but, I mean, it’s a battery so it makes sense. Lol Thankfully, it seems rather easy to at least remove it, and you can purchase the full battery part online, specific to your PS2! So you can worry a bit less. ( NOTE: *I only have ever owned and own slimline model PS2s, so I’m not sure how easy it would be to do this to a Phat* ) I haven’t looked up where to buy them yet, but I’ve heard plenty about that being an option, so hopefully if you do decide to have this process done, that it can go even smoother 😃. And I’m certainly no expert, as I have yet to do this myself, but I’d just like to spread the word… as it seems that some are unaware of the possibility of corrosive damage. I haven’t heard a word yet about that in this comments section, for how much people are discussing their discoveries and experiences with the CMOS. I hope this could help, as well as that I hopefully haven’t just been pulling accidentally incorrect information out my ass… XXDD… and that maybe I could alert you to a potential and likely avoidable issue. Good luck and best wishes to you! 💙
I did not see this reply until a year later. For a bit of context, the PS2 belonged to my father before it was handed down to me. The CMOS battery suddenly stopped working maybe a couple months of having it and I use it occasionally when I have time. Everything seems to be working as normal. However, I do not own a PS2 slim. There was an instance this year where my power went out, in which, most my consoles plugged into a socket that had a shortage was affected. Sadly, my Wii died and my 360’s power supply failed, but my PS2 was a champ and was barely affected by it. I have checked the battery for any of what you said due to me living so close to water anyways, but it seems to just had died due to age, so thank goodness. Otherwise, my PS2 is still working as great (despite the dead CMOS battery) as it usually does, thriving at 23 years old and I still use it occasionally for gaming!
I’m going to say it: RSOD isn’t scary. There are visuals, and they’re not scary(unlike Fearful Harmony on PS1, which had corrupted visuals that added to the horrifying factor) The ambiance is a bit loud, but not that bad. Just imagine it being the sound of the ocean (again unlike Fearful Harmony which the audio was the one of the main reasons it was horrifying)
Even as a kid and until now, I never feared the PSW2 RSOD. Probably related, I had a chipped PS2 and 70% of the time I saw this every time instead of a game 🤣
6:21 I love how everyone has scary memories with this screen, my friends and I hated it but because they had a game that sometimes worked and sometimes didn't (it was scratched) so we waited and started to scream out of rage when we couldn't get pass that screen LMAO
Again, you forgot the R Y A N C O O P E R error. It happens when you put a scratched/diferrent region/burned nfs prostreet copy. When you trigger this error, R Y A N C O O P E R jumpscare will appear and then it says: "The disc could not be readed and R Y A N C O O P E R is sad."
The red screen of death is iconic for many people. You put a wrong disk in, it drags you to hell , warns you to but a PlayStation or PlayStation disk in.
for some reason when i try it just gives me "disc cannot be read", i tried a few xbox 360 discs and a wii disc, even a movie disc, but no red screen
Not really. I had a jailbroken PS2 back then (I live in brazil, literally nobody paid for original games) and it was commonplace to get this screen.
you forgot the 2 in your comment!
@@boomkittyFXone time I put a pc software disc and it gave me the red screen
Correct it does take us to hell😂
6:20 Why did Sony decide to make this screen so insanely terrifying lmao. The whole ambience of the PS2 system has a really creepy feel to it…
It's like the console itself is angry with you.
"HOW DARE YOU BUY FROM THE COMPETITION AND TRY TO MAKE ME PLAY IT"
*Inserts bad disk*
Ps2: your going to the shadow realm jimbo.
bruh how the hell is this scary?
@@italianogeorgianomonoposto Imagine being a kid with an overactive imagination putting a scratched game disk in the system. That's what made it scary for us.
@@italianogeorgianomonoposto As kids we were all traumatized by it. Because we were kids…
Alive CMOS battery: Wee, happiness, games! Fun!
Dead CMOS battery: resistance is futile.
Is it okay if i will keep playin even if cmos battery is dead?
@@Azxcon Yeah, it doesn't really affect gameplay nine times out of ten. Your clock will just reset to 12/12/2000 every single time you turn it on.
Well, my CMOS battery is still working but it still resets the time every time i turn it on
There’s a chance that the dead battery could leak, but apparently the wrapping around PS2 CMOSes can make this potential damage/occurrence a little less destructive.
I’ll be replacing my dead one when I later will crack into that particular Slimline model I have (with a dying laser and dead CMOS). I might as well do it while I’m in there!! XXD But I’m pretty paranoid though, so that’s just me XXD
@@BinaryGamer556thats a dead cmos lol
This video actually helped me figure out what was wrong with my PS2. Thought it was just freezing up but apparently the CMOS battery is dead. Good thing I have some laying around.
Did you fix it?
Unfortunately they need to come with their own set of wires soldered into it for a proper replacement. I just reused the old battery’s connector on the new one with plenty of tape and seemed stable enough.
I have a dead cmos battery but it's works fine
Bob the builder
If you go to Settings Enter date and press O and X it should be fine
I love how in some of them there's a cute white dot flying around on the screen to keep you company while you wait for your game to load.
❤❤
i thought it was the disc swimming
I like how it like splits from the spinning circle formation to go to the other screens, when you return to the main menu it like goes back in
I like how the on the DVD errors the Phat model is more Articulate with “Play halted due to malfunction” and the slim be straight forward “This disc cannot be played”
I wonder what the difference is between the Disc read error screen and these ones on a black screen
in my opinion the phat is scarier in that scenario because a kid playing this probably has no idea what those words mean
@@abunchofrandomgarbage23 I think the PHAT is scarier just because of the word "malfunction"
The phat is the more sophisticated, older brother. And the slim is his younger, more straight-to-the-point sibling XXDD
Phat: Oops, something went wrong, sorry!
Slim: You're screwed.
3:51 The DVD Error is the scariest because it has no sound at all. Just complete silence, pitch-black, and one sentence. It is absolutely terrifying, especially on the PS2 Phat, where it refers to the error as a 'malfunction'.
My ps2 is 21 years old and I'm still suprised that it works perfectly fine like a brand new one
SameSame
Saaaaame
Mine, too. Even the CMOS battery hasn't pooped out yet.
Same
surrreee buddy
Now that I think about it again, the RSOD is only scary on the entrance, the ambience sounds like the sea.. and I am thankful enough I never had the PS1, sparing me from the infamous Fearful Harmony and Personified Fear.
that shit gave me nightmares and i don't even have a ps1.
@@mralwaysbored9496 me too
@@mralwaysbored9496Same, but it never gave me nightmares
I would have agreed with you on the PS1, but I saw a comment over 6 years ago that I still think about to this day, comparing the sound to the portals in Spyro, and I haven’t been able to unhear that ever since, so it doesn’t really creep me out anymore.
fearful harmony can only happen if your ps1 is modchipped or something like that so you wouldve been fine
I did not know about the CMOS battery one ! I was puzzled about it once when I was a kid and vividly remember that those orbs stopped spinning one day
Just see the clock in the dead CMOS battery scene, it stopped at 12:00:00 AM
It means that those orbs move with the ticking of the internal clock of PS2
As in computers , CMOS battery give enough power to the motherboard to keep save of bios profile and clock config
That's why those orbs stop moving in the UI of PS2
Yup same with me😂 this actually happened to me a couple months ago. I just said to myself “didn’t those orbs used to spin?”
The reason a PS2 with a dead CMOS battery doesn't have the orbs spin is that the animation phase that the orbs show is based off the current CMOS time. In other words, if you don't see the orbs spinning when you enter the menu, it means you have a dead CMOS battery.
After some weeks I turned on my +10 years old PS2, and it has the dead CMOS Battery animation, hahah. Gladly game saving and playing keeps working flawlessly
@KezKaz I wonder if you change the time on a ps2 with a dead cmos battery, the dots would change position but still wont move because it’s... dead. The dots would just update to whatever you set it. But if you reset the system it would reset the time and also reset the dots back into the middle. Now this is just a guess I would be surprised if I’m actually correct.
I think the DVD error is creepier than the RSOD because the RSOD actually has some sound and visuals to keep you company, unlike the DVD error.
I completely agree. Never went to sleep the night I saw that error message 😭😭
For real....
THANK YOU
Same. and I have a 2 day trauma from DVD Error
The RSOD ambiance actually sounds like the ocean
The CMOS error isn't technically an error screen. The orbs move in correspondence to the passage of time and the battery is what keeps track of time. Without the battery, time essentially doesn't exist, so the orbs get confused & stay in their default position.
They move again if you touch system date
They'll keep moving until you unplug your device(reseting/powering off won't stop them)
My theory is how the orbs move when you hover on system date is the orbs uses power from the plug so it makes it look like the CMOS battery is alive again. Another theory might be because of the system CMOS battery may have a little bit of power but had to stop because the system cannot recognize the battery's life.
Mine just died.
Is it ok to not replace the battery and just keep it as it is?
I hope there is no risk to keeping a dead battery in the console if all it does is tell time.
@@SharonisCarin321 yes, it's fine. It's just that the date on your save date will say that it's from 1999 or something
@@SharonisCarin321 Just don't if you want to save money. If you want, Open the console and find the dead CMOS battery holder, go replace it. Requirements is a professional and a working CMOS battery.
To me I think cmos one is the scariest of them all. With the cmos, everything looks so alive but without the cmos, everything looks dead and just gives a eerie feeling for some reason, especially with the sound effects behind it.
imagine just wanting to watch a movie and you start but then halfway through it you see
*_Play halted due to malfunction._*
Ngl id prolly shit myself like that’s wayyyy scary than “this disc cannot be played” imo
That actually happened to me once.
6:20
Creepiness as an adult: 8/10
Creepiness as a kid: 500/10
When I was a kid I wasn't afraid of the rsod and so i didnt care and restarted it
Not gonna lie, I was terrified and worried about my own life when I was a kid alone in my grandma house.. Everybody left for a while and me just getting FOREVER traumatized 💀
Yup is REAL
6:20 the fear of every ps2 pirate
Yeah, i just CAN NOT play my burned Madagascar bro😂
BK4, thanks for adding the "DVD Player is not set up" like you promised, now I could clearly see it
Woah member
Jejejeejeoooooo
I’m guessing the car is from the PS1 video
The CMOS one is unique because I don’t think it’s ever mentioned as an error
So I am not the only one who found these errors SO creepy? I am still wondering who thought displaying the errors in this way was a good idea, haha. To be honest, everything about the UI of the PS2 always looked creepy to me. The main menu, with the blue orbs spinning around, disturbingly calmly, like the end is near, like complete, utter emptiness has come to stay, like there's nothing more to reach... absolute loneliness. And the black background to strengthen the feeling. Then the menu with the memory card and the disc, with such silence, and a lonely little white dot occasionally going through the screen, like it's all that is left in this isolated world. So, so creepy.
And just in case, it's not sarcasm. I am trying to finally put to rest one of the things that scared me the most as a kid.
i agree i always used to think that it was the end of my life whenever a ps2 error occurred
I’m so glad that someone else described exactly why I hate the ps2 ui, it’s nostalgic but so terrifying to me
Every computer error is creepy af to me
I hope I'm not the only person that have errorophobia (i just made out this word)
Piraticaphobia (Pronounced Per-ridi-ca Phobia) (From the latin term, "Piratica" meaning "Piracy") is the fear of anti-piracy and/or error screens.
Jeez
Yeah no the startup screen used to freak the hell out of me as a kid, and still kinda does. And the system just has this tension to it that’s hard to describe
I was recently playing on my PS2 with my 7-year old sister. We ended up getting a RSoD while playing and somehow she didn't got scared by it. I'm honestly shocked since i almost crapped myself when i first saw it at the same age as her.
What? Recently?
Oh I understood the commend wrong
They're a different breed
I won't forget the RSOD one😨 That shit almost ruined my childhood
I remember being 5-6 yo I saw it and I was alone in my room at night. I was really scared after that, I mean REALLY Scared and since then I had a phobia of any TVs, Screens, Play Stations and even PCs.
I still see nightmares of being in that red hell with that shitty ambient sfx after a whole 12 years
Yeah, I can see why you still have nightmares.
What
very accurately about the phobia, I also had one too
@@youtube_channel_1111 i still do but only of like old tvs (CRTs) and old consoles which sucks cause i love retro games, so i just have to face my fears
@@Boliever10 SAME!! I always thought I was the only one... I don't even know where it originated from, but old tech scares the shit out of me. I find it so fascinating but once a friend and I tried to fix their record player and it was so scary to me that I felt like I would get a panic attack any minute... It sucks so much
6:20 Just feels like game over but for your real life
It’s like you die and go to hell
As a child, I was always afraid of this screen
@@trueenti219 Pure terror
Caught me off guard but never scared me too much
I was legit terrified as if I'm gonna die when I was a kid or that PS2 is alive and the Red screen represents its Blood like it dying and suffering for eternity 😭😭
The fact that it took that ps2 30 minutes to overheat is saying something
If this'd been a 90000 Slim it would've been God-tier lasting that long
No? I remember letting mine sit on (but the tv off for what its worth) all night then get on it in the day when i was like 5
Now I wish there was a way to access the system temps in software and display them
2:55 if I hear that wind sound I will die of scareness
5:55 #3 happened to me when I tried to play Sonic Heroes. I just had Team Dark's story left to beat, I got nightmare fuel instead.
Have you completed Sonic Heroes in the end? :D
@@MilesFox92 Sadly no. The disk was scratched up so badly it was unplayable, but I tried to grab a new copy or fix the one I owned.
@@shadaneanimates What about resurfacing the old, scratched-up Sonic Heroes copy?
@@AverageMD-Fan21 I'm not so sure about that since I no longer own a physical copy, but maybe there's a copy I can buy at one of those pawn shops that sell old video games; there's a few around where I live. I could probably pick one up and play it on an emulator.
@@shadaneanimates what a coincidence for you replying, i just got my hands on a ps2 copy of sonic heroes! it is from c.e.x though, so it has it's scratches and stuff. i tested if it worked, it fortunately did
5:18 The PS2 is too hot
Indeed😏
PS2 be melting 😏
goddammit
Y'all down bad over overheating 💀
PS 2 HOT
get it?
The last one gave me PTSD as it reminds me of that moment when your favourite disk gets too scratched to be read.
it happened to me on the wii
its like: this disc cannot be read.
me: *takes out disk*
wii: please insert mario kart wii
we just had to restart it
The blue lights glitch out with a dead CMOS battery because they’re actually a clock face in disguise. Since the battery powers the clock, the lights are stuck at 12 AM
My cmos battery was actually dead and sulfated, it won't keep the time unless i keep the console plugged but the orbs always were moving even with the battery dead! probably because my ps2 90010 sets the time at 01/01/2000 everytime i unplugged it. I changed the CMOS last week, so now the original CMOS with 12 years will rest in peace. Gg.
It takes some massive nuts to watch this with ptsd lads and lassies i respect the fellow nostalgia people here
I’ve come back after 2 years and this is still fun to watch. You are one of my favorite RUclipsrs 😊👍
6:36 Did you know if you also put a VCD in a PS2 that it will bring up the RSoD as the PS2 DVD player didn't support a specific MPEG which VCD requires. It's the same with PS1 except it only accepts CD-ROMs.
I didn't think there'd be another remastered errors video, since the last one was so long ago lol
There's an odd error that occurs sometimes when you try to play a scratched bootleg ps2 copy of a game, it ends up playing a glitched ps1 playstation boot sequence for some reason and also the console freezes at that screen afterwards
i think BK4 covered this in his ps2 errors video
@@annoyingidiotfr ....this is BK4's ps2 errors video?
might be because the console mistakes it as a PS1 disc and hands it off to the PS1 emulator, which in turn attempts to read the disc and throws up one of the PS1's many glitched error handlers
@@annoyingidiotfr this IS his ps2 errors vid
There are all which occur sometimes, when you doing something wrong.
6:28 you can also get this if you press on the disc area
And if you don’t watch Harley’s Letter Adventures.
@@UtahShark8798no upload content about how the race is of harry legs and Biden quitting is all about it's wrong Biden quit running for president right? It is!!!! biden is not about letters hes got harry fucking legs so edit comments!
@@UtahShark8798 Again, what kind of "Harley’s Letter Adventures" person are you!
@ZelMiko I’m not sure its just a random pre-announced show I made back in July 2019
I think the reason why the orb glitched out was that the orbs matched the time,and the cmos battery manages time so the orbs are glitched out
6:20 - Just by seeing the red you know that there is nothing to do anymore, especially if it was original
Not an error but did you know the blocks on start up will grow depending on how full your memory card is. Thought that was cool.
I knew that
What would happen if you got a 1tb memory card and modded it to put it in, and then filled it with a completed save file of every single game on the ps2
5:20
I remember, at that time I was playing Gran Turismo 2000, 10 minutes later the RLOD appeared and it turned out that my Ps2 cooling fan was broken
Maybe the yellow evo did it?
@@RandomBBCStuff yeah maybe the yellow evo broke my PS2 console
@@gxdyzzz3776 Just maybe, you never know.
The RSoD (Red Screen of Death) may startle people who had just got their PS2 (PlayStation 2). They may get used to it as they use it more.
Many thanks, TiledMasterCube
6:18 this screen (and the sound) gave me nightmares as a kid 😭
respect to this man for showing console errors recorded by him or not
CMOS and DVD errors in my opinion are the creepiest
That frozen clock... that messages on a silent black screen... they are just eerie
About the RSOD, I think I got used to it 😂😂😂
Me too
The red screen of death actually looks pretty cool
5:05 *modbo chip*
6:21 | That "Please insert PlayStation or PlayStation 2 format disc." screen is memorable than it is scary.
6:07 this is creepier than just starting up huhu
6:19 I think the reason that it is so creepy is to frighten homebrew devs testing their software but idk that can just be me
i dont think homebrewing existed before wii but idk
@@unnamedscribble-auttp yeah there was! (Freemic boot I think I forgor)
6:49 with this error ill have nightmares
2:48 I have a PlayStation 2 like this menu and nothing appears except the settings and it is not set to the current year just /2000/1/1/ Does this mean I should lose hope in it working?
man i remembered when i first (and only) had the ps2 overheat. i was super weirded out until i put my hand on the console and realized how long it was sitting in direct sunlight
2:44 The Dead CMOS battery has just 1 large orb that's freezing, is this gonna work with time machine?
I thank the RUclips algorithms for knowing that I love these vids
the red screen of death always scares the shit out of me
I wonder why the orbs stop spinning when the CMOS battery dies…it’s like the program for the user interface is tied to the hardware in some way…
apparently its because " The CMOS error isn't technically an error screen. The orbs move in correspondence to the passage of time and the battery is what keeps track of time. Without the battery, time essentially doesn't exist, so the orbs get confused & stay in their default position. " -leon legend, also in this comment section
The CMOS controls the orbs, as well as the ones within the crystal clock in the settings screen, because the CMOS is responsible for the time. Without a working CMOS, the orbs’ “clock face” is stuck at 12, leaving them all frozen in place there.
PSA: If you suspect your PS2 has a dead CMOS, it may be worth it to open your console up and either just take it out or go ahead and replace it; I’ve heard they can leak, and you definitely don’t want a corroded battery leak inside your system getting between you and your games. Best wishes everyone!
That’s a lovely intro for such an experience
0:40 PS2: DVD player is not set up.
I also heard some static freezeing by the way it's so loud on my speakers idk if you can hear it I can
So if you put a wrong disc the sound freezes? Damn ok.. idk if you can hear the sound it's louder than other glitches
Go to where ps2 says disc could not read you can hear the loud freezeing static legally
6:20 i get serious nervous when i hear this
Oh my god finally u are back
Intro: 0:00
Midless: 0:28/1:11/1:52/2:35...
3:24/4:04/4:49
a few moments later...
5:11 ?
Finale: 6:05
GG Guys thanks to monching
Byes🎉🎉🎉
Very cool video, I’ve played ps3 and I can’t believe you could still boot it up unlike my ps3
I have a PS3 too, every now and then I get to Play it.
@@Shuts same
actually my ps1, ps2, and my ps3 wont boot.
its just the ps4 and ps5 working
@@Shuts damn I miss those GT5 days
@@axtrailie23 sad, maybe ur ps1-3 was too old
6:20 I love how it practically gets mad at you for trying to insert an unrecognizable disc
4:36 only appears after the 2001 Walt Disney Home Entertainment logo (Black background variation) fades to black. Sourced from the DVD release of Freaky Friday (2003) (THX) when played on a PS2 slim with parental controls built-in.
1. PS2 Startup
2. Parental Controls Screen
3. FBI Warning Screens
4. 2001 Walt Disney Home Entertainment logo (Black background variation)
5. “This disc cannot be played” error message
I can't understand why Sony decided to put entire graphics with moving parts when it comes to the RSOD but then it's just a blank screen or nothing at all for the others??
0:01 sounds cool
6:21 sounds positive
Other consoles: Oops! Your disc format is foreign.
PS2 RSOD: *Ready to die?*
6:21 Red screen of death
Who got scared to s*** when these popped up as a kid
0:58 this is also occurs when the lasers bad to
Hell yea another PS2 error i never saw in my entire life. Nice😎
The RSOD scared me so badly I stopped playing on my PS2 for nearly a month! The story was that my cousin gave me a pirated disc of kingdom of hearts that my cousin somehow got from someone and when i put it in my phat PS2 it displayed the RSOD Which gave me nightmares for a whole week thinking that my PS2 was evil😂
3:05 oh the dots define cmos battery. My PlayStation has all of them, but my step dad’s on has 2 dots.
Funnily enough. They made a whole rsod for the wrong discs, but then if you put an Xbox disc in you get a speacial video instead
0:08 **dances around**
Ps2 is happy but one moment it's angry for putting in a wrong disc
Ngl I like the rsod. Pretty calming.
I had the dead CMOS battery error on my childhood ps2 so me and my dad decided to dssamble it and replace it first time I ever took apart a console
Long time ago I had an error when I was playing "Asterix and Obelix XXL2: Mission Las Vegum": It was going normal, but suddenly the game crashed, and then it appears the Red Screen Of Death unexpectedly. It was kinda strange, but maybe it was because that game is a pirated copy, althought that screen always appears after the startup or after the "Playstation 2" logo, and not during the gameplay
old console ui's are so creepy
Oh look, a compilation of my nightmares as a kid all wrapped in one video.
I’m still surprised that people got scared of this screen when they were little 6:20
Me and my sister were small and we were so use to this screen cause one of the games we loved to play would always cause this screen 💀 then we’ll try our best to clean said disk
2:43 So that's why the thing didn't move. I thought it was a normal glitch the entire time.
6:20 - Wanted to play GT4, but your life was ruined instead
Gta 4 or gran Turismo 4?
The dead cmos battery error seems to only happen to certain models, my ps2 slim (k chasis, scph-79001) had dead cmos battery, an that error never appeared, even after taking the battery out and booting the console with no battery
3:40 why did they chose to bring you to hell because the disk didn’t worked ?
why is it scary
also wrong timestamp the real timestamp is 6:21
Ps5 error: 🧚♀️🥺✨
Ps2 error: 👹🔥😈
Definitely the Rsod
Lol
RSOD is the scariest shit i could have ever seen in my childhood EVER 😭
He’s gone back to his old style videos lol
My favorite things to watch are video game consoles errors and repairs
So THAT’S why the little orbs don’t swirl on my system! I DIDN’T KNOW THE PS2 HAD A CMOS BATTERY.
EDIT: Apparently the wrapping on the batteries makes the leaks less damaging, according to another source. So if you were going to open your PS2 (Slim seems easier to do this with?) for a general cleaning or other maintenance anyway, you might wanna do it then. But otherwise, it seems like you could just be A-OK👌
It’s very interesting! :D Just a warning, though: I’ve heard that dead CMOSes can potentially be prone to corroding and thus, leak into your console which can damage it. You’d probably want to avoid that for the sake of preserving your system, so it might be a worthwhile option to research how you can take it out and/or replace it.
As for the Slimline models that I personally only owned and own, it seems to be a fairly easy process. I’m going to have to try it for myself once I get back home to help one of my slims with the dead battery! I’m no expert and I don’t know much about this, but I just wanted to spread this possibility I’ve heard about; and I mean, it couldn’t be *that* far from the truth, considering a CMOS is a battery like any other that’s probably capable of corrosion, right? XXD Well, good luck and best wishes with whatever happens!! 💙
I replaced the battery with no issue; no corrosion present either. All of my consoles fortunately have none of the typical “signs of age/death” with corrosion, worn out parts, etc…
The worst one was my original Xbox with its absolutely ancient factory-original thermal paste (which required a special solvent to get off of the dye) and mildly thick coasting of dust. Which, for being as old as it is, wasn’t even that bad; a quick blow of compressed air and a paintbrush dusting later and she’s basically like new again. Lol.
@@ilovemonkeyos Ah, thats great! I should hope at least most of our consoles will age gracefully XD
I wonder how you keep them so clean, though? :0@@ilovemonkeyos
I remember as a kid, I was terrified of my ps2. The sound it made filled me with anxiety. So I would frequently turn the console on before the tv so I could put in the disk I wanted and not listen to the start up sound. Then I’d wait 10 seconds before turning the tv on to play.
I remember being absolutely terrified when I encountered the red screen of death because I accidentally smeared my hands on the disk. Thankfully I managed to fix it but that screen haunted my nightmares for a week lol
Me too with the ps3. The reason I didn't want to hear that sound it's because it's like when you write chalk on a board!
@@ConclusiveLion663 A chalk on a board isn't scary, right everyone?
@@ZelMiko hurts your ears
I actually own a 22-year-old PlayStation 2 that has a dead CMOS battery, like everyone else is saying, the system is working fine. The only issue is the time resets when it's powered off or unplugged. I don't plan to replace the battery till the console runs into an error that is either concerning or fatal. (Broken fans, broken disc drive, file corruption etc.) and I'll just replace both at the same time. as for I know right this second, the console is still going strong! 22 years old and no repairs yet.
EDIT: Apparently the wrapping on the batteries makes the leaks less damaging, according to another source. So if you were going to open your PS2 (Slim seems easier to do this with?) for a general cleaning or other maintenance anyway, you might wanna do it then. But otherwise, you probably shouldn’t even worry and it seems like you could just be A-OK👌
(And Sorry for my biiig ramble, I’m in my PS2 phase again XXDD)
---
Hello, just wanted to let you know that if the battery is not removed, it may corrode and leak into the inside of your console, which can definitely cause problems. Corroded batteries are not something to be messed with, especially when it comes to a sensitive electronic such as a gaming console.
I haven’t experienced this first hand, but I do have a dead CMOS in one of my PS2 Slims that I will replace as soon as I get home, because I’d rather not take a chance. I recently heard that it can happen 😅
I’m not sure if it really would but, I mean, it’s a battery so it makes sense. Lol
Thankfully, it seems rather easy to at least remove it, and you can purchase the full battery part online, specific to your PS2! So you can worry a bit less. ( NOTE: *I only have ever owned and own slimline model PS2s, so I’m not sure how easy it would be to do this to a Phat* )
I haven’t looked up where to buy them yet, but I’ve heard plenty about that being an option, so hopefully if you do decide to have this process done, that it can go even smoother 😃.
And I’m certainly no expert, as I have yet to do this myself, but I’d just like to spread the word… as it seems that some are unaware of the possibility of corrosive damage. I haven’t heard a word yet about that in this comments section, for how much people are discussing their discoveries and experiences with the CMOS.
I hope this could help, as well as that I hopefully haven’t just been pulling accidentally incorrect information out my ass… XXDD… and that maybe I could alert you to a potential and likely avoidable issue. Good luck and best wishes to you! 💙
Additionally, Huge congrats on your healthy PS2!! I bless that it’ll keep on trucking for many years to come! :D
I did not see this reply until a year later.
For a bit of context, the PS2 belonged to my father before it was handed down to me. The CMOS battery suddenly stopped working maybe a couple months of having it and I use it occasionally when I have time. Everything seems to be working as normal. However, I do not own a PS2 slim.
There was an instance this year where my power went out, in which, most my consoles plugged into a socket that had a shortage was affected. Sadly, my Wii died and my 360’s power supply failed, but my PS2 was a champ and was barely affected by it.
I have checked the battery for any of what you said due to me living so close to water anyways, but it seems to just had died due to age, so thank goodness.
Otherwise, my PS2 is still working as great (despite the dead CMOS battery) as it usually does, thriving at 23 years old and I still use it occasionally for gaming!
I love how the CMOS loading wheel stops and stares at you like "wtf man?"
6:20 Tip: Turn on the volume to MAX
6:20 this only happened to me once like 10 years ago.
It’s been like 6 years since I’ve first seen a PS2 and I finally understand why some startup screens have white blocks/towers and why some don’t
I’m going to say it:
RSOD isn’t scary.
There are visuals, and they’re not scary(unlike Fearful Harmony on PS1, which had corrupted visuals that added to the horrifying factor)
The ambiance is a bit loud, but not that bad. Just imagine it being the sound of the ocean (again unlike Fearful Harmony which the audio was the one of the main reasons it was horrifying)
Even as a kid and until now, I never feared the PSW2 RSOD. Probably related, I had a chipped PS2 and 70% of the time I saw this every time instead of a game 🤣
3:52 for me this one is more terrifying
@@julian-wx3qcagreed. The lack of audio makes it eerie
6:21 I love how everyone has scary memories with this screen, my friends and I hated it but because they had a game that sometimes worked and sometimes didn't (it was scratched) so we waited and started to scream out of rage when we couldn't get pass that screen LMAO
ofc theres a creepiness scale after each error and how to get it, since old errors scared kids till they peed
BK4, I like how you do start up before the errors
Again, you forgot the R Y A N C O O P E R error.
It happens when you put a scratched/diferrent region/burned nfs prostreet copy. When you trigger this error, R Y A N C O O P E R jumpscare will appear and then it says: "The disc could not be readed and R Y A N C O O P E R is sad."
I have the PSP Version and Ryan Cooper is not exist.
All that exists is Pagani Zonda F
Not funny 😐😐😐
@@zdsm. no you
B R Y A N C O O P E R
@@Shuts nice car
Honestly, I think I was the only kid who was more terrified of the actual bootup screen than the red screen of death.