![]() ![]() In late-1990s machines, it might not exhibit this issue, yet in modern computers, its emulation is ridiculously fast, as there seems to be no programmed limitation on the clock speed. Unlike most of its offspring, it is entirely in Japanese. The emulator runs in DOS protected mode, as such, it needs a copy of DOS4GW.EXE to sit in the same folder as it. First released in January 1999 and last updated in July 1999, X1EMU is designed to be compatible both with IBM-PCs and PC-98s running MS-DOS. X1EMU The mother of all Sharp X1 emulators. Despite this, the X1 Turbo core is quite decent. Its X1 Turbo Z and X1 Twin cores are listed as not working as of November 2019. The PC Engine section of its X1 Twin core is based off Ootake. Despite referencing X millennium T-tune code, it does not seem to be a fork. The X1 Twin core used to have an official Windows CE port, which was discontinued in early 2010. It is the only emulator to receive frequent updates up to this day, and also the only one (besides MAME) to have documentation in English. It was the first emulator to support the X1 Twin, and is currently the best one at it. ↑ Xmilx fork and x1_libretro core are still active.Ĭomparisons eX1 A very recent emulator that progressed very fast.↑ Only possible with Xmilx, ikaTune, Xmil106RS, T-tune + ikaTune, T-Tune forks.Needless to say, the X1 Twin also featured a HuCard slot. The X1 Turbo Z featured a 4096-colour mode, built-in FM synthesizer, video capturing/editing capabilities and (in the Turbo ZII and Turbo ZIII models) 128 kB of RAM. The X1 Turbo, released in October 1984, featured higher resolution and more VRAM. ![]() ![]() The whole X1 line runs on a Sharp Z80 A CPU at 4 MHz and 64 kB of RAM. When necessary, operating systems must be loaded using external storage devices, such as cassettes and, in all but the first model, floppy disks. The last additions to the X1 line, the X1 Twin, also included a built-in NEC PC Engine.Īt the time, Sharp was following a Clean Computer philosophy: this means that, in order to leave the user in control of the RAM, the computer shipped only with an IPL and BIOS. Despite being powerful for its time, the NEC PC-8800 series outsold it. These computers doubled as TV sets and included many functionalities that made use of this combination, such as the ability to superimpose text to the TV image and, in later models, even to digitally record live television, albeit in a compressed 8-colour video format. The first model, simply named Sharp X1, was released in November 1982. Kiwi, ManiaMadness91 and Jon Gandee.ĭazz and Petie also created a Twitter/X account ( to better communicate on the small updates that happen with the site and with server maintenance.The X1 ( エックスワン Ekkusu Wan) is a Japan-only line of home computers created by Sharp’s television division. On the customs front, we have submissions from Coolest Guy Around, Z-9 Lurker, hansungkee, Jesse_JAT, Dolphman, TheEric132, CreeperJaxon, Weegee Doll, ToadCracker, Mr. '98, DoKoCo, Smedis2, Yawackhary, KoolTimYT, syphersephir, volo, BillyBnMOfficial, Jon Gandee, Gorsal, sanityormadness, Belial, true, HijodeKrypton and DogToon64. We also gotten submissions from the likes of JeorgeReds78, MDTravis, shadowman44, Ya Block, MistPrism, FridayFunkGaming291, ANG. C ripped from Spyro 2 while Modata ripped more from Yu-Gi-Oh! GX Tag Force. thadiusII ripped Garage: Bad Dream Adventure while blueberrymuffin ripped Jane's Realty. Winmillion21 ripped Brave Dungeon while Packmabs ripped Eastward. sanityormadness did some Nintendo 64 games while Barack Obama did Albion.Īrzette: The Jewel of Faramore recently came out and Glutko went straight to work. MrLlort submitted some Fruit Ninja stuff while Keenfan1990 ripped the Ikari Warriors. Alxala did their usual work of the Gameboy systems while Falconpunch did more Fire Emblem: Heroes. First we have Doc von Schmeltwick ripping from various versions of Nintendo's Golf while ogarvey added more to Laser Lords. We start the month off with some major submissions and a lot of ones not really worth namedropping. ![]()
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