lmao nope
AveryCreated:
You could try making a program that compiles a ROM into a working program now that you can edit source files.
Is there something less powerful than the NES, but more complex than chip8 to be emulated?How about a Texas Instruments graphing calculator? My impression is that they haven't significantly changed since I was a middle school student in the early 90s. Just think, though! You could save money for millions of American middle-school students who are for some reason still required to buy one of those things, if those students already own a 3DS. EDIT: By the way, is that speed a 3DS or a "New 3DS"?
That was one of the things I thought of.Is there something less powerful than the NES, but more complex than chip8 to be emulated?How about a Texas Instruments graphing calculator? My impression is that they haven't significantly changed since I was a middle school student in the early 90s. Just think, though! You could save money for millions of American middle-school students who are for some reason still required to buy one of those things, if those students already own a 3DS.
Those are more powerful than the NES processor-wise. Though of course, you don't have to emulate complicated graphics hardware.
I just like to think of the Megaman 2 comparison. Megaman 2 was successfully ported to PTC in full, so PTC is at least roughly as powerful as the NES. SmileBASIC is more powerful than PTC, therefore SmileBASIC is more powerful than an NES.
But that's about ports, not emulation. I agree with Snail above me that emulation isn't feasible, but probably any NES game could be individually ported to SB.
They could be ported, but not distributed. Not without Petit MODEM!
You could try making a program that compiles a ROM into a working program now that you can edit source files.Yep, Static recompilation. If anyone wants to try I'm sure that this article, which outlines the process, would be quite helpful to them! http://andrewkelley.me/post/jamulator.html
This is almost a year old..You could try making a program that compiles a ROM into a working program now that you can edit source files.Yep, Static recompilation. If anyone wants to try I'm sure that this article, which outlines the process, would be quite helpful to them! http://andrewkelley.me/post/jamulator.html
You could contact me if you need any help with that. I write software for those things all the time. I'm pretty good with Z80 Assembly.Is there something less powerful than the NES, but more complex than chip8 to be emulated?How about a Texas Instruments graphing calculator? My impression is that they haven't significantly changed since I was a middle school student in the early 90s. Just think, though! You could save money for millions of American middle-school students who are for some reason still required to buy one of those things, if those students already own a 3DS. EDIT: By the way, is that speed a 3DS or a "New 3DS"?