I imaged an MSX cassette labelled `Moon Patrol` containing Microbyte's tape conversion of Dempa's MSX ROM release of Irem's Moon Patrol arcade game. The ROM image stored on the cassette differs slightly from the Dempa/Irem ROM cartridge I dumped previously, but all the differences appear to be erasure of the original author and publisher names and insertion of Microbyte's name along with a bit of text localization. Side A contains the software, and side B is blank with nothing recorded. This tape contains a BASIC first-stage loader, followed by multiple stages of machine-coad loader and finally the modified ROM image which is loaded by a custom loader. The ROM image has been modified to be non-bootable. I did not find this tape release of the software catalogued by others. The named tape files are `PATROL`, `µBYTE`, `µMOON`, and `µMOON1`.

This tape's loader makes an assumption that the MSX has 64KB of RAM in a single primary slot which it has selected as its primary memory, which was the case for commonly available MSX models in Argentina (e.g. Talent DPC-200 and TPC-310) but was relatively uncommon elsewhere - though the Spectravideo SVI-738 and Fenner SPC-800 also work this way and can run the game. The loader also assumes the MSX starts in a screen mode where `WIDTH 39` is possible which will not be the case on many Japanese MSX2/2+ systems. If the loader gives the error `Illegal function call in 1` then type `SCREEN 0:RUN` and press Return.

CAS image fingerprint for the software found on Side A:
```
18K Moon Patrol (Side A) (Microbyte) (Argentina) [RUN'CAS-'] [_].cas crc32:7837190f md5:196c21b7180bf32cd048fec3059ebefd sha1:22776492744f10ed496b304a2a631c2dc82d63f6 sha256:41f93c728bb0d008f42f85eea58a2707d2244e02ad3d0dd932d6479fbf08646b
```
Raw 24-bit stereo 44100 Hz FLAC audio was imaged using a Nakamichi BX-125 tape deck and a Steinberg UR22mkII USB ADC with Audacity under Win11 and is intended to be archival, CAS/ROM is for emulator use, and WAV is regenerated from CAS for the benefit of an actual MSX. Short filenames and long ones contain the same data.
