TheMobRules wrote on 2025-06-26, 17:50:
Very cool, I really like these kinds of projects!
And yes, an "NES on an ISA card" would be awesome, similar to the 3DO Blaster or the NEC PC-FX GA.
Hi, it reminds me of the Spectravideo SVI-838 (aka X'press 16).
That was an IBM PC with an MSX2 graphics chip and AY-3-8912 sound chip.
It superimposed CGA over the V9938 VDP. Some PC games were ported to MSX2.
https://www.msx.org/wiki/Spectravideo_SVI-838
https://www.rigpix.com/vcomp/spectravideo_svi838xpress16.htm
Edit: What I think would be interesting is to give an IBM PC running DOS the capabilities to tiled graphics, like the NES/Dendy/Famicom had.
It would combine things like files and large hard disk storage with it.
I'm looking forward to a Chip 'n Dale 3! Or a new Mega Man/Rockman. :)
Edit: Now that think of it, the Creative Music System (Game Blaster) would be a fine assistant in the sound departement.
Sure you can go AdLib, too, but giving some of the old PSGs something to do would be nice.
And technically speaking, the CSM chips were part of the original 8-Bit Sound Blasters, anyway. ;)
Edit: Another, funny idea: If we make a simple composite video capture card/parallel port dongle,
we can display the NES PPU image on a VGA card in an overlay window.
I know, it sounds crazy, but such framegrabber homebrew circuits were made in late 80s and early 90s.
To grab composite video from a video camera or a VHS player/VCR/Laserdisc player.
Capturing video instead of still images needs a 486 or Pentium, maybe.
It depends on the resolution of the capture. For NES, it can be low-res.
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