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2012-04-07
, 19:23
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Posts: 733 |
Thanked: 249 times |
Joined on Jan 2010
@ UK
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#2
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2012-04-07
, 19:38
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Posts: 1,100 |
Thanked: 2,797 times |
Joined on Apr 2011
@ Netherlands
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#3
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Nice 1,
i will give this a go even just for the cartridge games nemesis/gradius series they had great sound and good graphics but the scrolling was poor.
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2012-04-07
, 21:34
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Posts: 733 |
Thanked: 249 times |
Joined on Jan 2010
@ UK
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#4
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2012-04-07
, 21:44
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Posts: 1,100 |
Thanked: 2,797 times |
Joined on Apr 2011
@ Netherlands
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#5
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Cheers for that i will look into it,
also over here i am sure the msx also had something to do with toshiba.
but overall it was a good system for its time and it was an alternative to the amstrad, spectrum and c64.
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2012-04-08
, 00:58
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Posts: 528 |
Thanked: 345 times |
Joined on Aug 2010
@ MLB.AU
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#6
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2012-04-08
, 02:43
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Posts: 371 |
Thanked: 252 times |
Joined on Nov 2010
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#7
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2012-04-08
, 06:00
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Posts: 1,100 |
Thanked: 2,797 times |
Joined on Apr 2011
@ Netherlands
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#8
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2012-04-08
, 06:06
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Posts: 1,100 |
Thanked: 2,797 times |
Joined on Apr 2011
@ Netherlands
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#9
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wow great work.. interesting 8bit computer to port
let me know if you port vice tohint hint
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2012-04-08
, 10:58
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Posts: 733 |
Thanked: 249 times |
Joined on Jan 2010
@ UK
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#10
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I can also recommend the MSX2(+) konami game which is very similar: Space Manbow.
The MSX was created in the early '80s to set a standard for home computers. Although it was backed by large companies like Philips, Sony, Sanyo, Samsung and Panasonic, it was only a moderate success in countries like Japan, Spain, Brazil and The Netherlands.
Game company Konami was very active on this platform, and series like Metal Gear started on the MSX.
The last generation was the MSX TurboR, only manufactured by Panasonic (around 1990).
Emulators
There are quite a few emulators for the MSX. fMSX is already available for the N900. fMSX is not able to emulate the TurboR, and it could not run some small games I made way back
OpenMSX is more accurate and can emulate almost all extensions ever made for the MSX. I am using version 0.7.2 of openMSX. Not the newest version, but I had issues with more recent versions (in terms of performance etc). I have had contact with the developers of openMSX, but we could not fix the issues on short notice.
Bios
A bios is needed for openMSX. By default, it uses the opensource bios C-Bios, which is included. But this bios has limitations, and is basically only suited for loading gameroms.
In openMSX-gui, I only offer support for C-Bios and the Panasonic FS-A1GT MSX turbo R machine. This computer was the last en most powerful MSX. If you want to emulate the Panasonic FS-A1GT MSX turbo R, you will need its bios roms (named fs-a1gt_firmware.rom and fs-a1gt_kanjifont.rom) and place it in /opt/openmsx/share/systemroms or /home/user/.openMSX/share/systemroms. The roms can be found on internet.
Keyboard
The MSX came with a lot of variations of keyboards (European, Japanese, Arabic etc). So general keyboard emulation is difficult, especially because the MSX had native keys like "graph" and "select", not to mention the Japanese "kana" key. Some keyboard shortcuts are defined to overcome this, see the about in openMSX-gui.
Joystick
With the gamegripper (or SixAxis) in mind, I binded keys to emulate the first joystick. It can be reconfigured and disabled. By binding the keys to a joystick, the keys for using the joystick can still be used for typing text.
Loading games/programs
It supports roms and disks in various formats. It can be zipped, but I would be careful not to zip disk images if data is writted to them.
OpenMSX and openMSX-gui can be found in the extra-devel repository.