The Perfect DOSgaming Machine?
- Dogbreath
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The Perfect DOSgaming Machine?
Today I had an interesting (if not somewhat insane and slightly stupid) idea: build a computer geared exclusively towards running DOS games. What I need to know is what is the ideal hardware (and software) for maximum compatibility? And where can I buy the parts in question?
Chances are this computer won't exist anywhere outside of my head (though I may build it this summer if I have any money left over from my car payments) but I still think it'd be fun to figure out what the ultimate DOS computer is-if only for the sake of someone else less lazy than I actually building it.
Chances are this computer won't exist anywhere outside of my head (though I may build it this summer if I have any money left over from my car payments) but I still think it'd be fun to figure out what the ultimate DOS computer is-if only for the sake of someone else less lazy than I actually building it.
I went down this road before and decided that there isn't one computer setup to play all the dos games. You have to remember the DOS game era stretched from the mid 80's all the way to the mid 90's and included many different processors, video cards, sound cards, etc.
So I ended up with a Tandy 1000 HX for the old CGA and Tandy games
A 386/40 for middle of the road DOS games, and a p200 for later era games. There are quite a few video and sound cards in the mix also.
You will find timing errors running real old games on newer machines (and the utils to fix this realy dont work), and without the correct soundcards the games seem flat to me.
So I ended up with a Tandy 1000 HX for the old CGA and Tandy games
A 386/40 for middle of the road DOS games, and a p200 for later era games. There are quite a few video and sound cards in the mix also.
You will find timing errors running real old games on newer machines (and the utils to fix this realy dont work), and without the correct soundcards the games seem flat to me.
How about somewhere between a 386 DX and a 486 SX. RAM: no limit, minimum 2 MB.
Or perhaps a 486 DX2/50 with lots of RAM.
Think somewhere along those lines. Anything above a Pentium 100 is generally too fast. Also try to avoid AMD/clones and stick with Intel CPUs.
Or a 486 DX4/100 with a dandy turbo button.
Also my Pentium mobo has an option to turn off the cache. That allows it to run lots of old games.
Or perhaps a 486 DX2/50 with lots of RAM.
Think somewhere along those lines. Anything above a Pentium 100 is generally too fast. Also try to avoid AMD/clones and stick with Intel CPUs.
Or a 486 DX4/100 with a dandy turbo button.
Also my Pentium mobo has an option to turn off the cache. That allows it to run lots of old games.
- 486 player
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Any computer capable of running Windows 95 (but running dos) should be pretty good.
My Dos computer is a old Compaq 120MH Pentium, 16MB Ram, and 1.51GB HD running Dr. Dos 7.03. That's sufficient enough to run any Dos game that was made in the mid to late 80s and up. If anything, it needs more memory and hard drive space.
My Dos computer is a old Compaq 120MH Pentium, 16MB Ram, and 1.51GB HD running Dr. Dos 7.03. That's sufficient enough to run any Dos game that was made in the mid to late 80s and up. If anything, it needs more memory and hard drive space.
<A href = "http://dosstuff.cjb.net" >Free Dos Stuff</a>
One machine will only satisfy a narrow range of DOS games. Speed can too slow for last generation games (Quake 1) or too fast for some old games (causing crashes). Each era has specific sets of hardware designed for those games (sound and video cards) to get the best experience out of them.Jeff wrote:Any computer capable of running Windows 95 (but running dos) should be pretty good.
My Dos computer is a old Compaq 120MH Pentium, 16MB Ram, and 1.51GB HD running Dr. Dos 7.03. That's sufficient enough to run any Dos game that was made in the mid to late 80s and up. If anything, it needs more memory and hard drive space.
experaince from he who still has his original dos machines
My experiance of the best dos machine would be
Asus motherboard
Pentium 133 or 200
Sound Blaster 16
96 megs ram(i had my system running that much with dos)
Ati mach 64 video card (more mem the better, 4megs i think was most you could get)
harddrive don't much matter
12x cdrom fast but not to fast
Also for those looking to build a dos machine, freedos is a great option to look at. Open source and free. Also for those looking for parts.
www.vfxweb.com
Asus motherboard
Pentium 133 or 200
Sound Blaster 16
96 megs ram(i had my system running that much with dos)
Ati mach 64 video card (more mem the better, 4megs i think was most you could get)
harddrive don't much matter
12x cdrom fast but not to fast
Also for those looking to build a dos machine, freedos is a great option to look at. Open source and free. Also for those looking for parts.
www.vfxweb.com
hacking the gibson
I'm running a 486dx2 66 with 8 megs ram, soundblaster 16, 4x cd drive, and a nice old display adapter, capable of up to 1024x786x24 bit colour.
I call it, the gibson.
the system was built in 94ish, maybe 95
anyways, it runs all the dos games I could ever want, perfectly. Not only that, but because of some of the software soundblaster packaged with the card, I can listen to loud german heavy metal while killing nazi's in wolfenstein 3d.
I want to add another 8 megs ram, which I might have in another computer kicking around.
Anyways, I have a question.
Is it possible to ghetto-rig windows 95 on top of dos 6? or at least to make a frankendos by copying over some of the utilities offered in 6 that were dropped in 7?
[email protected]
I call it, the gibson.
the system was built in 94ish, maybe 95
anyways, it runs all the dos games I could ever want, perfectly. Not only that, but because of some of the software soundblaster packaged with the card, I can listen to loud german heavy metal while killing nazi's in wolfenstein 3d.
I want to add another 8 megs ram, which I might have in another computer kicking around.
Anyways, I have a question.
Is it possible to ghetto-rig windows 95 on top of dos 6? or at least to make a frankendos by copying over some of the utilities offered in 6 that were dropped in 7?
[email protected]
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http://ansis.folklora.lv/dosver/dosvr251.zip
Try that to prevent the "Incorrect DOS version" error message when transferring DOS 6 files to a Windows 9x system.
Try that to prevent the "Incorrect DOS version" error message when transferring DOS 6 files to a Windows 9x system.
The machine i build for dos games is a Pentium 200 MMX (slow enough to scale down and fast enough to play later DOS games) with a S3 Vision 864 card (2 mb) and a old SoundBlaster 16 with a Yamaha DB50-XG daughterbord for the wavetable connector (that's a must have with games with good midi music).
I love 320x200!
I went for an amd 5x86 133 - dunno why, it just seemed like the best of the 486 cpus
Forget the mobo chipset - but I made sure it supported the WB caching in the AMD cpu
32Mb RAM - don't need any more and 64Mb counts too slowly
Matrox Millenium II 4Mb for nice picture quality (and VESA support) .. though I think the ET6100 is probably the best choice (for compatibility) if you can find one
Pure3d 3dfx card - using this for descent II atm
SCSI cdrom, though I'm considering going back to IDE as the drive I have spins a little loudly
SB16, GuS, Yamaha DB50XG
Dodgy ol 14" monitor - I think one of the nicer sony 15" is what I'm aiming for though
Moslo works ok if I need to slow it down.. works fairly well in most instances.
Forget the mobo chipset - but I made sure it supported the WB caching in the AMD cpu
32Mb RAM - don't need any more and 64Mb counts too slowly
Matrox Millenium II 4Mb for nice picture quality (and VESA support) .. though I think the ET6100 is probably the best choice (for compatibility) if you can find one
Pure3d 3dfx card - using this for descent II atm
SCSI cdrom, though I'm considering going back to IDE as the drive I have spins a little loudly
SB16, GuS, Yamaha DB50XG
Dodgy ol 14" monitor - I think one of the nicer sony 15" is what I'm aiming for though
Moslo works ok if I need to slow it down.. works fairly well in most instances.
I'm also a lucky owner of the DB50XG. Soundblaster 16 + DB50XG board = perfect. Together with the SuperWave32 probably the best midi you can get. Damn, Doom sounds soooo good with that card. Don't have a GUS though, probably should get one for those good ol' Scream/Fast tracker days, and always nice to have a little IRQ/DMA solving challenge :-)
W
W
I love 320x200!
- GameMaster.EXE
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IBM or Microsoft should release a special version of dos that is designed for gaming only. Maybe they would have if the 90's had lasted longer. The era of dos games seems to be coming to a close. I should have expected this from Microsoft. Leaving dos, their first creation, behind in the dirt and leading Windows on a rampage through the computer industry and Macintosh, out of breath, trying to catch up.