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Posted in FPGA, Retrocomputing Tagged arcade, fpga, learning, retrocomputing, video ← AVX-512: When The Bits Really Count Becky Stern, David Cranor, And A CT Scanner Vs The Oura Ring → ...
This review of the Mr. MultiSystem 2 by [Lee] lifts the veil on a surprisingly noob-friendly FPGA console that finally gets the MiSTer experience out of the tinker cave and into the living room.
The MiSTer project picks up from that earlier project, but is built around a more powerful, readily available development kit with an FPGA — plus HDMI, USB, microSD, and more — at its core.
This is an FPGA implementation of the Taito F2 arcade system for the MiSTer platform. The Taito F2 system was used for arcade games from the late 1980s to early 1990s and featured advanced graphics ...
As usual, my MiSTer updates include another core being developed by the prolific Jose 'jotego' Tejada. This time he's tackling the classic Sega arcade board, the System 16.
A well-built FPGA device should make it possible to play retro games more comfortably for longer periods of time and with fewer glitches along the way, and the open-source MiSTer FPGA console is ...
The MISTer FPGA open-source project supports several consoles, retro computers, arcade machines and handhelds. As the SuperStation One makes use of the same architecture it can use those cores too.
bring on the pre-rendered backgrounds New FPGA-powered retro console re-creates the PlayStation, CD-ROM drive optional Works with original PS1 accessories and supports other MiSTer FPGA cores.
We'd also be remiss if we didn't mention that the mysterious MARS FPGA, a self-contained console ringing in at an eye-watering $699, will also run unmodified MiSTer cores out of the box.