kanyero wrote:Hi. […]
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Hi.
I'm trying to build a vintage computer for the last ms-dos and first win95 games.
Currently i have this computer:
cpu: k6 2-450
Mobo: HOT-591P chipset VIA MVP3
Ram 2x64 mb SDR (128 mb)
vga: S3 trio 64v or nvidia tnt2 m64
Sound:Sound blaster live 5.1
Hdd: 20 gb ide ata 100 hd.
But i have some doubts:
- What vga sould i choose between the two i have?
- What would be the recommended amount of ram for this computer? I've heard that too much ram could make the computer slower.
Next goal: sb awe ISA sound card 😁
Tbh, I consider Creative in general and the AWE cards in particular overrated. For DOS, SBPro2 compatibility (which SB16/32/64 don't have) is more important, in Windows you can do most of the "AWE" stuff in software and things like A3D and EAX (which your SBLive can do) are more relevant.
I'd suggest to rather look for one of the 'better than original Creative' SBPro2 clones such as Aztech 2316/2320, ESS 688/1868 or Yamaha YMF719-based cards. Cheaper than an AWE and more useful. Keep the SBLive as well and you get best of both worlds: A3D, EAX (and SB16 compatibility in DOS) from the Live, SBPro2 and (in the case of Aztech or Yamaha) real OPL3 from the ISA card.
Pss: Could this computer be better for dos/win9x gaming?
P3 450 @ DTK PRM-0080i ZX 128 mb sdr ram ati 3d rage pro agp 2x and sound blaster audiopci es 1371/1373
Not in this configuration...
The CPU is a bit faster than the K6-2 450, which helps Windows performance, but the Rage Pro is inferior in Windows performance and DOS VESA compatibility to the TNT2, the ES137x card offers no benefits over the SBLive in either DOS or Windows and lacks hardware A3D/EAX.
However if you were to put the TNT2 M64, SBLive and ISA sound card in here, it would be a slightly better Windows platform. Only drawback is that you can't clock back as far for slower DOS performance as you can with the MVP3/K6-2 combination - but if you say 'last MSDOS games' I doubt that would be necessary anyway. It also doesnt have RAM caching limitations, so you can add as much RAM as you like without affecting performance (although don't go over 512MB, DOS & Win9x don't like that).