Reply 60 of 71, by Joseph_Joestar
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darry wrote on 2025-04-23, 03:29:For those people who feel like it might be "cheating", I ask the question of how they would feel if the same or similar had been achieved long at ludicrously expensive hardware using actually available technogy ? For example, would running software from a RAM drive on a fully populated EMS expansion (8MB or 16MB RAM) that had been modified with battery backup have been cheating back in the 1980s ? If a similar result can be reached today using cheap and reliable commodity hardware, is it really somehow worse ?
Yeah, people somehow forget that RAM drives were a thing. Sure, memory was very expensive during the early and mid '90s, but if you had money to burn, you could do some pretty cool things with that.
Here's a somewhat reasonable (although still expensive) setup that you could get in early 1995. Intel 430FX based motherboard, Pentium 120 MHz, 512 KB cache and 64 MB RAM (fully cacheable). That would have cost several thousand USD, but you could create a 32 MB RAM drive under MS-DOS 6.22 and easily copy one contemporary game there. When you're done playing, just copy the saves back to your hard drive. Lightning fast load times and all that.