Nothing beats original hardware
Yes, but it gets so murky Watson. To me real hardware is real hardware with a 68K CPU. Once you replace the CPU, what is it then? ...especially when FPGA does such incredible job of emulating the custom chips.
The issue I have with both is livability. Many have noted how frustrating that PiStorm experience can be, I have no personal experience with it because while I enjoy a video about PiStorm I know it's not for me. That whole video output drama with it too to get RTG. The cleanliness of MISTer FPGA is just so impressive.
Well, here we could have a discussion about how you rank these, but being standalone FPGAs, they do belong in the same FPGA category.So, the Vampire 4 Stand Alone is in same bucket for you as MISTer and UNamiga?
Honestly Watson, I can't speak on it because I never used it, and never intend to. I never even ran Pimiga. For me, it's just not what I want from my Amiga...Amiga hardware and chips just become a peripheral to the host Pi.Mostly all of the issues reported for pistorm32 are when using it in full mode.
Thats the reason why i sold my Icedrake and keep my 1200 V2 because I believe the V2 Vampire is a superior product compared to the V4 and more compatible since it still retains the original chipset. I have high hopes for the PiStorm, as I think it has the potential to perform as well as, or even better than, the Vampire with some time for development. Both the Vampire and PiStorm aim to emulate the CPU while maintaining the rest of the system intact which is how an accelerator should act imho.You need to distinguish Vampire V2 and Apollo V4. The latter is a replacement for most of the Amiga, the former is an accelerator which brings very fast CPU and very fast RTG, plus ethernet. The Vampire V2 is very compatible on my A1200 and i rank it the best Amiga accelerator i have ever owned. It is equivalent to 68060@50 * 4 and its RTG speed is awesome with maximalized bus access. Pity it does not exist for the A4000.
What does that mean exactly? A link or explanation would be appreciated.WHDload is sorted out with a wrapper
WHDLoadWrapper is a helper tool for WHDLoad on accelerated Amiga platforms
that need certain options set before WHDLoad games/demos are run and allows
for options to be set for specific games and demos. It will work irrespective
if the game is loaded via an icon in Workbench, whether the game is loaded via
the command line, or via a WHDLoad game launcher such as IGame, Tinylauncher,
etc.
The tool uses a Database file to find the parameters that are needed for the
game/demo and then applies those before WHDLoad is executed.
Totally agree to that statement. Been an advocate of the Classic Accelerators, favouring the Phase 5 and DCE products just because for me they work. Although have had problems recently with a MK1 Cyberstorm, which I have now got around.You know that old saying about opinion's....
I have one and like it, everything I have tried runs perfectly fine.
My advice is to try it for yourself. All you need is the pistorm32 adaptor and a raspberry, if you find it's not for you, you could easily make back the money spent.
If you do decide to try it, emu68 is the best option. Grab the latest 1.0 release form github.
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Releases · michalsc/Emu68
M68K emulation for AArch64/AArch32. Contribute to michalsc/Emu68 development by creating an account on GitHub.github.com