• @Quexotic
    link
    English
    58 months ago

    Right? Like, doesn’t dolphin already do this?

    • @Kecessa
      link
      English
      98 months ago

      Dolphin doesn’t emulate N64…

      • @Quexotic
        link
        English
        1
        edit-2
        8 months ago

        Huh. I remember playing perfect dark at high res on my PC. Guess I forgot which emu that was. Thanks for the heads up.

        Now get off my lawn! Lol

        • @Kecessa
          link
          English
          18 months ago

          Probably Project 64 since that’s the most popular one

          • @Quexotic
            link
            English
            18 months ago

            Yes. That is it. It’s been since before I had kids… Everything before that is a little bit fuzzy.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      4
      edit-2
      8 months ago

      There’s a difference between emulation and what Analogue does. Analogue’s products actually implement the hardware of their respective consoles in FPGAs. (Also, what Kecessa said)

      • @Quexotic
        link
        English
        1
        edit-2
        8 months ago

        Yeah, it was probably project64 I was using. I get th FPGA is fantastic and allows for, basically reprogrammable hardware (think re-flashing all your firmware at the rate of a few KHz) but isn’t this a solution seeking a problem? I never had any real issues emulating N64, and it didn’t cost anything.

        I’m not really seeing where the benefit of this product is. I hope the sell the crap out of it because it sounds cool, but I would never invest in the idea.

        Hope I’m wrong for their sake. If I can’t remember the name of an emulator I used 13 years ago, hopefully that means I’m wrong about this too.

        I wonder what they’re selling it for. FPGAs are about 150-300 off the shelf. Looks like the pocket is selling at 500-800 by scalpers, and I can see the demand for that. Maybe if the 3d plays all PS1, N64 and PS2 games, all in Super sharp 4k?

        Regardless, this will be interesting to watch for further developments.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          18 months ago

          These are for retro collection junkies. Most people who buy analogue products are only planning on using physical carts to play. This will likely not have openFPGA so don’t expect it to run anything but N64 games, it will probably get a custom firmware eventually that allows rom play but that functionality will not be out of the box.

          • @Quexotic
            link
            English
            18 months ago

            Rom play would be good. That would make sense, but I think it would definitely be a mistake to not fully leverage the FPGA and make it do other things. If you have the ability to change your processor into a different processor on the fly, and don’t, you should be using custom chip design instead of FPGA. In the long haul, that should be cheaper.

            No, if they’re using FPGA, and advertising it, the consumer should expect this box to be a chameleon. Anything else would be a disappointment, just looking at their earlier work.

            Still, it’ll be interesting to see what they do with it but I already know I can’t afford it.

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              English
              18 months ago

              I get where you are coming from but once again this is a niche product for one use only. Just because they use an FPGA doesn’t mean it should be capable of running other cores. If a consumer is looking for that type of use then they should be investing in a Mister. Analogue builds retro consoles with cartridge use in mind, they use FPGA because it gives the most accurate experience. It’s a boutique product, so yes it’s expensive and doesn’t make sense to someone who just wants an all in one device like a mister.

              • @Quexotic
                link
                English
                18 months ago

                Interesting. My understanding of field programmable gate arrays is that they were field programmable and therefore programmable in the field. Perhaps I’m mistaken. I’m just thinking that it would be foolish for them not to leverage this for higher profit. Their handheld has a MIDI sequencer… Something tells me that maybe they were leveraging it there too.

                I recognize this sounds sarcastic but I don’t mean it to be. I’ve just never done any in-depth study into FPGAs, just a little bit of an intro to them when I was back in college an Eon ago. 😂