• My 12 y/o daughter recently ran into a "does it run DOOM" reference in media (I think a graphic novel-- not sure) and asked me about it. I got to explain the phenomenon and show her some examples (she found the pregnancy test to be particularly amusing). I'll have to show her this one.
    • The pregnancy test had altered innards. So it was fake.
      • Sadness for that, and for my inability to read in-depth.
        • Well, it's still a great idea and a cool project.
      • But you can play Zachine v3 games in a pencil, such as Zork I-III, Tristam Island, Calypso... with builtin writting recognition under some special printed sheets (where you can print and then xerox them for the cheap).
    • What’s the graphic novel?
      • I don't know. I'll ask her. She burns thru them and it may have already been returned to the library.
  • ’ve been following Adrian's Afga system series, great dive into the unknown.

    Realistically, I would've stopped the moment BASIC worked, called it "good enough," and then gotten distracted attempting to write a Forth for it.

  • Looks roughly as smooth as it looked on my 25mhz 386
    • On my 33mhz (I'm almost, but not quite sure about the frequency) 486 SX (yeah ...) it ran OK until the levels where you'd get a lot of monsters. In those, I had to zoom in to the smallest possible screen size and even then it was barely acceptable.

      So while the video is impressive and I couldn't do something like this myself, I was glad when I saw how bad it ran, as that computer of mine would a little bit more than 30yo today, so to have that beat by a 40yo printer controller would make me think I could have done something to have it run better back then!

  • I am faintly disappointed that "running Doom" did not involve printing out a series of frames at a hilariously low effective framerate, then taking the pile and using it as a flipbook.

    I mean, sure, major props for kludging your own video generator in there, but...

  • Now please do it on a Cray-1 from 1976!
  • This is freaking awesome.
  • Agfa: now there's a name you don't see any more.
  • Now do Crysis
    • Whoever owns the rights for Crysis should open source as much as they can.

      Just so that Crysis can one day run on a future computationally overpowered smart toaster.