Are games that boot from bios a real thing? would be interesting or an OS that has the exact dependencies to launch a single game aka minecraft launcher but from bios. Idk how practical that would be but its a cool concept.
Wow you did not disappoint. I think I will make a TIL post about playing doom from bios. I should probably get to that now before tomorrow or it wont count as a TIL.
There’s whole category of software that runs without OS, look up “bare metal”, for example you can run web server on raspberry pi pico and connect it to ps4 to have offline jailbreak capabilities, mind you, raspberry pi pico have 264kb of ram and 2mb of memory (up to 16mb) and dual core 133mhz cpu
A shocking number of floppy disk games were self-booting. It was the norm outside of, like, MS-DOS and Amiga.
Karateka for Apple II infamously exploited this by being double-sided. The Apple II’s floppy drive was single-sided - you had to flip the disk over to read the other side. Karateka fit on one side. If you booted it upside-down, it would play upside-down.
Should the machine’s operating system be calculated in the storage too?
Is there a competition for smallest bootable 3D FPS?
Your bios screen could be if you’re brave enough.
Are games that boot from bios a real thing? would be interesting or an OS that has the exact dependencies to launch a single game aka minecraft launcher but from bios. Idk how practical that would be but its a cool concept.
https://www.pcgamer.com/doom-coreboot-coredoom/
Wow you did not disappoint. I think I will make a TIL post about playing doom from bios. I should probably get to that now before tomorrow or it wont count as a TIL.
There’s whole category of software that runs without OS, look up “bare metal”, for example you can run web server on raspberry pi pico and connect it to ps4 to have offline jailbreak capabilities, mind you, raspberry pi pico have 264kb of ram and 2mb of memory (up to 16mb) and dual core 133mhz cpu
A shocking number of floppy disk games were self-booting. It was the norm outside of, like, MS-DOS and Amiga.
Karateka for Apple II infamously exploited this by being double-sided. The Apple II’s floppy drive was single-sided - you had to flip the disk over to read the other side. Karateka fit on one side. If you booted it upside-down, it would play upside-down.
GBA Jam runs for another ten weeks.
Potentially. See my edit shove