The GameCube's disc format, known internally as NROM, uses a custom filesystem and a basic XOR encryption scheme tied to the disc's [[wikipedia:Burst_cutting_area|BCA]] to prevent unauthorized reading and copying. However, the discs are otherwise physically identical to [[wikipedia:MiniDVD|miniDVD]] discs, which in turn are reduced-size standard DVDs; therefore, if the GameCube's disc drive is hacked using an external device to disable the security mechanism, it can read standard miniDVD and DVD discs. Some PC DVD drives can also read GameCube discs, although software such as [https://wiki.gbatemp.net/wiki/RawDump RawDump] is necessary to access their contents. Early in development, the GameCube used full-size discs equivalent to DVDs. | The GameCube's disc format, known internally as NROM, uses a custom filesystem and a basic XOR encryption scheme tied to the disc's [[wikipedia:Burst_cutting_area|BCA]] to prevent unauthorized reading and copying. However, the discs are otherwise physically identical to [[wikipedia:MiniDVD|miniDVD]] discs, which in turn are reduced-size standard DVDs; therefore, if the GameCube's disc drive is hacked using an external device to disable the security mechanism, it can read standard miniDVD and DVD discs. Some PC DVD drives can also read GameCube discs, although software such as [https://wiki.gbatemp.net/wiki/RawDump RawDump] is necessary to access their contents. Early in development, the GameCube used full-size discs equivalent to DVDs. |