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History of Amiga

Posted: Wed Aug 13, 2014 7:44 pm
by cowsmanaut

Re: History of Amiga

Posted: Thu Aug 14, 2014 1:46 pm
by Chaos-Shaman
I watched the first 5 mins, and will watch the rest during lunch. Amiga has always been a computer that i'll love. had many many hours of fun with friends and family. during that time I didn't know anyone with a computer so it was interesting to many back then. people were afraid of computers back then, thought they needed to know how to program, they just were not use to keyboard and mouse. those were the dayz when we'd all sit in front of the TV and watch and play together with a case of beer. so much fun. it is when they changed over to the PC and I couldn't play Eye of the Beholder series that I left the Amiga, but not until after buying my first hard drive at 40 meg. I remember those dayz.

Re: History of Amiga

Posted: Fri Aug 15, 2014 11:46 pm
by ebeneezergude
Love this vid - awesome!

Re: History of Amiga

Posted: Sun Aug 17, 2014 1:04 am
by cowsmanaut
I was surprised to see that Amiga had been it's own company first, I had no idea that it wasn't always under Commodore.. and that whole Atari thing.. trying to seriously screw them over.. oh man.. It adds a new dimension in the Amiga vs ST that has stood through the ages.

Amiga is still around, sort of, but nothing like it once was.. Then again, same can be said for Atari..

Re: History of Amiga

Posted: Tue Oct 14, 2014 3:17 pm
by Gambit37
Interesting looking Amiga book on Kickstarter:
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/21 ... ommpendium

Re: History of Amiga

Posted: Wed Jul 22, 2015 5:23 pm
by Gambit37
Early version of Deluxe Paint source code released:
http://www.computerhistory.org/_static/ ... urce-code/

This is pretty cool -- my first real experience making digital graphics was in Deluxe Paint. An awesome art program.

Re: History of Amiga

Posted: Thu Jul 23, 2015 1:01 am
by cowsmanaut
nice :)

Re: History of Amiga

Posted: Thu Jul 23, 2015 9:00 am
by Gambit37
Wow, it turns out that 30 years ago TODAY is when the Amiga was first introduced:

http://amiga30.com/

And that Amiga Visual Compendium book, mentioned a few posts back, is now available to buy:

http://www.funstock.co.uk/commodore-ami ... ndium-book

Re: History of Amiga

Posted: Thu Jul 23, 2015 10:13 am
by Jan
Oh, boy, 30 years! Feels like yesterday, doesn't it? I've always been an Atari man, but I've got a lot of nice memories connected to Amiga - I particularly remember a great deal of time spent playing the incredible Hired Guns on it with my friends at my friend's place in the mid 1990s. :P

I wonder how many kids nowadays would identify the word Amiga as "a computer" and not "the name of the future US president". :wink:

Re: History of Amiga

Posted: Thu Jul 23, 2015 8:29 pm
by cowsmanaut
and now Commodore make smart phones :D

Re: History of Amiga

Posted: Fri Jul 24, 2015 7:01 pm
by Saumun
Very enjoyable.
And to think... It could have been the Atari Amiga! I didn't know this.

Re: History of Amiga

Posted: Wed Sep 23, 2015 12:22 pm
by Gambit37
I missed Cow's post about Commodore making smartphones. Here's what he was talking about:

http://www.ubergizmo.com/2015/07/commod ... martphone/

Re: History of Amiga

Posted: Thu Apr 28, 2022 1:23 am
by cowsmanaut
So, this showed up on Facebook today...
https://www.creativebloq.com/reviews/a5 ... QnbyL0JTWQ

a new A500 mini.. now wondering how badly I want it.. I mean.. can I get deluxe paint on it.. hmmm..

Re: History of Amiga

Posted: Thu Apr 28, 2022 1:44 am
by Gambit37
I've followed that for a while. Was tempted to get one, but then realized that it was just nostalgia at play, I would never really use it, and it would be a complete waste of money. Your mileage might vary ;-)

Re: History of Amiga

Posted: Thu Apr 28, 2022 9:22 am
by cowsmanaut
yeah, the keys look pretty small for typing.. and the games list is not all I could hope for.

Emulates Amiga 500, 600 & 1200 (ECS/OCS/AGA)
Save & resume game functions Via USB, add your own games, update the firmware, and connect your own devices (USB memory stick required (NOT supplied)). THE A500® Mini is compatible with 100's of classic Amiga games and demos, utilising WHDLoad for simplicity (games must be legally obtained/purchased from the legal owners)
50/60Hz in 720p HD via HDMI
Multiple scaling options & CRT filter
Full list of 25 games:

Alien Breed 3D
Alien Breed: Special Edition'92
Another World
Arcade Pool
ATR: All Terrain Racing
Battle Chess
Cadaver
California Games
The Chaos Engine
Dragons Breath
F-16 Combat Pilot
Kick Off 2
The Lost Patrol
Paradroid 90
Pinball Dreams
Project-X: Special Edition 93
Qwak
The Sentinel
Simon the Sorcerer
Speedball 2: Brutal Deluxe
Stunt Car Racer
Super Cars II
Titus The Fox: To Marrakech And Back
Worms: The Director's Cut
Zool: Ninja Of The "Nth" Dimension

No dungeon master or clones like EOB..

Re: History of Amiga

Posted: Fri Apr 29, 2022 10:38 pm
by terkio
CADAVER was a dungeon crawler.
THE SENTINEL I loved this game, very addictive, completed up to the end: Park 9999. Weeks of hard work.

Re: History of Amiga

Posted: Sat Apr 30, 2022 9:26 pm
by Estoroth
Ah Amiga 500 my second computer after the Amstrad CPC6128, I have bought the 512Ko extension just Dungeon Master. :-)
The list of Game of this Amiga 500 mini is very poor compared of the list of game released on this fantastic computer but I think that for license reason it will be really difficult to get a lot of game.

My favorite game on the list are

_ATR: All TERRAIN RACING: Very good game, I have played a lot. The only regret it is that this game have been released when the Amiga starting to be end of life.
_KICK OFF 2: Awesome football game, maybe the most local multplayer game I have played in my life with the first Kickoff.
_PINBALL DREAMS was a very good flipper game, I have very good memories of this game and the sequel Pinball Fantaisies.
_ANOTHER WORLD is fantastic game too, maybe little short. I have bought the 20th Anniversary Edition on Steam many year ago and have a lot of fun to play again !
_THE SENTINEL, the concept is awesome but I have never finished the game.

In a category of Dungeon Crawler, I would love to have Dungeon Master, CSB and Black Crypt added on the list of games provided with the Amiga 500 mini.
And I almost forgot PUSH OVER, I don't even remember how many hours I spent on it on my Amiga 500. :D

Re: History of Amiga

Posted: Fri May 13, 2022 7:53 pm
by cowsmanaut
I didn't have a lot of games for Amiga. I'll try to remember...

Speedball II
Dungeon master, Dungeon master CSB, Dungeon master II
Elvira
Elf
Shadow of the beast(with tshirt)
x-out
Battle squadron
Prince of Persia
EOB
treasure island Dizzy
International Karate
Gods

Then a bunch of demos that I played and re-played many times that came with my Amiga power magazine. First Samurai came with a making of spread showing desings and graphics and the first level. There was a top down dungeon game with a little character that talked back at you with a british accent. I think it came quite late in the Amiga lifespan and I'm not certain if the game was finished. I don't remember its name and can't seem to find images of it.

In that list above, I played Battle chess, but not on my computer.. I also played Paradroid.. but on C=64. Also my dad had Zool.. but I never played it. So really, it was just Speedball II that I would know. I find that nostalgia plays a big part in wanting to play some of those older games again. A belief that they were in some ways superior to modern games, if not in graphics, but in gameplay. The truth is, most are not. While some are.. Dungeon Master for example still lures in younger players when exposed to it. So, I'm less inclined to get a system filled with games I don't have nostalgia for. Better to just get on an EMU ..