Keatah Posted December 12, 2013 Share Posted December 12, 2013 (edited) Is the c380 emulated yet? If not, I have a unit I'd donate to a qualified emulator programmer. However, this screenshot from old-computers.com seems to suggest it has! http://2warpstoneptune.wordpress.com/category/video-games/home-consoles/ Edited December 12, 2013 by Keatah Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Keatah Posted August 10, 2015 Author Share Posted August 10, 2015 Bump Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
slydc Posted September 23, 2015 Share Posted September 23, 2015 Hi! Sorry to dissapoint you but the Atari Video Pinball C-380 isn't emulated or simulated yet. Olivier of Old-computer made a rendered screenshot so it's not from any emulator or simulator. But it will be simulated one day because it can't be emulated, there is NO coding. It is just discrete component circuits reduced and compacted into one chip, same as the General Instrument AY-3-8500-1 as too many other pong consoles and dedicated game consoles. But i know there is a simulator of the Nintendo Block Kuzushi made for Windows and Xbox360. I did try out the Windows version and the coder made a hell of a fantastic job! He coded all 6 games PLUS 44 extra levels!! --- Sly DC --- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
overgrouth Posted November 10, 2019 Share Posted November 10, 2019 On 9/23/2015 at 10:28 AM, slydc said: Hi! Sorry to dissapoint you but the Atari Video Pinball C-380 isn't emulated or simulated yet. Olivier of Old-computer made a rendered screenshot so it's not from any emulator or simulator. But it will be simulated one day because it can't be emulated, there is NO coding. It is just discrete component circuits reduced and compacted into one chip, same as the General Instrument AY-3-8500-1 as too many other pong consoles and dedicated game consoles. But i know there is a simulator of the Nintendo Block Kuzushi made for Windows and Xbox360. I did try out the Windows version and the coder made a hell of a fantastic job! He coded all 6 games PLUS 44 extra levels!! --- Sly DC --- Agreed! I own one of these things and as I learned removing a componet removes the code for that portion. This device has a chip per avery connected peive for example the paddle holds the code for the on screen paddle and if the paddle is removed so is the visual input of the in gane paddle along with the colision detections. This peice of hardware wpuld have to be compleatly reprogramed in a computer to so called emulate it. Would would actually just be a poart / homebrew. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Keatah Posted November 11, 2019 Author Share Posted November 11, 2019 A fast i7 or i9 could handle a node list style emulation. And FPGA could recreate the circuit - though not on a transistor-by-transistor level. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DragonGrafx-16 Posted November 11, 2019 Share Posted November 11, 2019 I should have bought that Video Pinball I saw at a thrift store 10 years ago. I think it was really cheap as well. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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