The EasyFlash cartridge lives in memory at $8000 to $9FFF (the game cartridge area). The original game, however, expects to find its data on disk. Disk2easyflash injects a custom fast loader routine. This routine tricks the game into thinking it is reading from a disk, but it is actually reading from the cartridge’s internal flash memory at RAM speeds. This is the "magic" that makes floppy games run on cartridges.

Disk2EasyFlash is for the keepers of the old world:

We do not sell nostalgia. We sell continuity.

You do not actually have to run the command line. The C64 community has already done the heavy lifting for you.

The OneLoad64 Collection is a curated set of over 1,700 Commodore 64 games, all converted to EasyFlash CRT format using—you guessed it—disk2easyflash and similar tools. If you want a "download, copy to SD card, and play" experience, skip the conversion and download the OneLoad64 gamebase.

However, for obscure homebrew titles or rare European budget games, disk2easyflash remains the only solution.

The floppy disk was never meant to last forever. It was a temporary envelope. Your machine, your data, and your operation were meant to last.

Stop chasing obsolete drives on eBay. Stop praying to the gods of magnetic decay.

Disk2EasyFlash. Read the past. Write the future. Boot the present.


In the mid-2000s, a quiet crisis unfolded in workshops, radio stations, and industrial back offices. For decades, the 3.5-inch floppy disk had been the unshakable workhorse. It carried CNC machine code, sequenced synth patches for vintage drum machines, delivered firmware updates to MRI machines, and booted the legacy terminals of municipal transit systems.

But one by one, the drives began to click. The magnetic media rotted. The "Click of Death" became a requiem for data that wasn't just nostalgic—it was operational.

Companies faced a brutal choice: Scrap a $100,000 machine because its $0.50 floppy boot disk failed, or hire a data archaeologist at exorbitant rates.

✅ Single-file PRG games
✅ Multi-file demos and games
✅ Games with custom fast loaders (e.g., The Last V8, Turbo Outrun)
✅ Some copy-protected titles (if loader is understood)

Disk2EasyFlash is a tool for converting vintage Commodore disk images (D64, G64, etc.) into EasyFlash-compatible ROM images so they can run on modern EasyFlash-equipped Commodore 64 hardware or emulators. Below is a concise, user-facing post you can publish or adapt.