Amiga Uae4all rc3 My Top 10 best working games Disk

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Ian Micheal
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Amiga Uae4all rc3 My Top 10 best working games Disk

Post#1 » Fri Aug 02, 2019 8:45 am

Hi,

I grew up with the c64 and amiga, this is very cool emulator big problem a lot of adf (roms) just dont work on it. and you may think ok that games does not work.. Well it's not the case most times you have to try every release of that game and there are many cracking groups that released games. here i have put together 10 of the best that work on this emulator for dreamcast I will write a how to use for this emulator soon. there are over 15000 games for the amiga this is only my top10 and the ones that worked many dont i would of picked. These are the games i spent the most time on.......
dont know the amiga ? here is a top50 youtube video lot of amiga games was ported to the snes and megadrive. amiga has much better sound then both most times.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o47HqRwa4J8
Top 100 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AAmPao9yIcc
if you like to see more amiga dreamcast action just post below
Link to selfboot CDI https://mega.nz/#!frZwkQxY!bPGYt2lQJlMS ... _kpX6baNVc
Uae selfboot builder just drop you games in data_hb click build image to make your own selfboot cds
uaeselfbootbuilder.rar
(1.23 MiB) Downloaded 473 times

Emulator by Chui

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            FEATURES            


   Frameskip between 0-1 without sound and 1-2 with sound.
   Fast FAME Motorola 68000 core by Fox68k.
   Savestates support.
   Autoframeskip for real speed.
   Dreamcast SD-Card support.
   Mouse & Keyboard Dreamcast supported.
   Virtual Keyboard with triggers L-R.
   Joystick is emulated with digital pad + A,X buttons.
   Mouse is emulated with analog pad + Y,B buttons.
   Fast sound with 8 buffers synchronized.
   Filemanager with subdirectories access.
   Complete menu with 'start' button: load, throttle, frameskip, reset...
   2 joysticks emulated.
   Under PAL dreamcasts ask 60-50Hz selection.
   Save disks changes to VMU.
   Superthrottle mode for speed up intros and loading time.
   SH4 exceptions catched for stability.
   ADZ support (ADF floppy image gzip compressed)
   2 floopy drives emulated.


   New features have been added to release candidate version :   
      
   - SuperThrottle   
   Hold right trigger first and left trigger second for automatic sound off and frameskip to 10 for speed up. This try to avoid large time for intros and loading time.   
      
   - ADZ support   
   You can compress your ADF floppy images with GZIP compression utility in order to save CD space. GZIP is free and multiplatform: Windows, GNU/Linux, MacOS ...   
      
   - Save disks changes to VMU   
   UAE4ALL can save to VMU disk sectors changed using ZIP compression. For games as Dune2, now you can save your campaigns and continue at future. A new menu option called "Save Disks" has added for enable or disable this feature.   
      
   - 2 floppy drives emulted   
   You can choose on filemanager a new disk for DF0 with A button and a new disk for DF1 with Y button. Also, you can eject DF1 with 'Eject DF1' menu option.   
      
   - Throttle   
   Amiga is a hard machine to emulate. So, a lot of games support drawing shortcuts and cpu timeslice ampler. These methods speed up emulation and improve playbility under Dreamcast.   
      
   - Autoframeskip   
   Unfortunately, UAE4ALL needs frameskipping for real time emulation. Active auto-frameskip menu option for real speed.
If you want sound, it's a very important thing, the sound needs to be synchronous


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1) Frontier - Elite II
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=srlJVE5 ... 7AA6193498 whole youtube guide and playthur this is brilliant 24 eps :)
In 2004, readers of Retro Gamer voted it as the 20th top retro game, with the editors commenting: "More so than its predecessor, Frontier was a game you either loved or hated. Some found it far too dull and were unable to get to grips with it, while fans just couldn’t get enough. This was lucky really as Frontier was staggeringly huge on a mind-bending scale. The game universe contained millions of planets, and coupled with the ‘do what you like’ gameplay, this was a game that could take over your entire existence."[11]

Gameplay

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There is no plot within Frontier, nor are there pre-scripted missions (as there are in its sequel, First Encounters). Instead, players explore space while trading legally or illegally, carrying out missions for the military, ferrying passengers from system to system, engaging in piracy or any combination of the above. As a consequence, Frontier cannot be completed or "won", and players instead decide what to aspire to and set out to achieve it.

In Frontier, the player begins in the year 3200 and assumes the role of one of Commander Jameson's grandchildren, having inherited one hundred credits and an Eagle Long Range Fighter from him. By the game’s standards, these are very modest resources, and are intended as a spur to encourage players to earn money by whatever means they feel is appropriate.

Though the plot is minimal, some background information about the universe of Frontier is provided. There are two major factions in the galaxy: The "Federation", based in the Sol system, and the "Empire", based in the Achenar system. These two factions are bitter enemies, but at the time of the game they have established a tense cease-fire, akin to the Cold War. Players are free to side themselves with the Federation, the Empire, both, or neither; the game does not restrict one's political career. Both sides have military forces that a player can run freelance missions for, with successes leading to a military promotion. The ranks of the Federation and Empire are independent of each other. Playing for both sides adds to the difficulty to acquire a rank promotion for either.



As with Elite, much of Frontier is concerned with trading: players can buy and sell a variety of goods—from food and computer parts to guns and slaves—with the aim of making the most profit possible from each trading run. Thus, learning to compare prices in various systems is essential for profitability, and calculating overheads for each trip (such as fuel, missiles, and hull repair) are essential skills. It often becomes apparent that a particular trading route is profitable, such as the Barnard’s Star - Sol route. It is worth noting that some trade goods (particularly narcotics, nerve gas, weaponry and slaves) are illegal in many systems and attempting to trade in these can result in a fine from the police, which can often escalate into the police attacking you if not paid. However it is often worth the risk as illegal goods generally carry a very high price on the black market.

Frontier substitutes Elite’s arcade flying style for one based rigidly on Newtonian physics: momentum must first be neutralised to bring the player's craft to a stop, and turning 180° has no effect on the direction of travel until previous momentum has been counteracted. The craft’s control is largely left to the player, but often day-to-day tasks such as navigating from a hyperspace exit-point to a desired planet or space-station and docking can be handed over to a ship's autopilot. Travel within a star system occurs across realistic distances at realistic speeds, and therefore even with the fastest ships capable of more than 10G of acceleration, intrasystem travel can take many hours. Therefore the game provides an "accelerate time" function that makes game time pass at 10, 100, 1000, or 10,000 times the normal rate.

The issue of interstellar navigation is solved by the use of a hyperdrive to travel between stars. The player can select a system from the star map and "jump" to it, provided they are reasonably far from a settlement. They then arrive at the outskirts of that star system and must make their way to their destination. A ship's maximum range is calculated according to its mass, so small, light ships can have impressively large ranges. The time taken to travel the maximum range is always exactly one week, with shorter jumps taking less time. Unlike the rest of the game's travel, these jumps are not experienced in some multiple of real time and appear almost instantaneous (theories range from suspended animation to extreme time dilation). A hyperspace jump leaves a visible remnant, a "hyperspace cloud", at the entry and exit points. These are visible for some hours afterwards, ostensibly making it possible for pirates and assassins to track a ship through hyperspace, arrive at its destination first and attack without police intervention.

Sooner or later the player will run into enemies, most likely in the form of space pirates. The different star systems have differing government and social structures, meaning that some systems are safer than others. The Core worlds are usually the safest, with anarchic systems being the most hazardous ("Riedquat" and "Phekda" are amongst the most notorious anarchies in the game). Combat is handled completely realistically. In practice, this means both ships taking slingshot thrusts at each other, lasers being fired constantly at each other, until one of the ships is destroyed. All enemy ships destroyed count towards the player's combat rating, starting at "Harmless" and progressing towards "Elite".

The game's copy protection was worked into the game in the form of police spot-checks, making sure the player is the legitimate owner of his ship. At certain intervals in the game, the police would ask the player to "please enter the first letter of word X, row Y on page Z" of their ship's manual (which the game manual ostensibly was). If the player entered a wrong letter on three occasions, he would be arrested and his ship impounded, at which point the game ends.

If not the best ever created openworld space trading adventure ever one of the best games ever made this game is deep and long i spent over 6months playing it and still did not scatch the surface.
you will need the Manual https://openretro.org/amiga/frontier-elite-ii/docs pdf down load is there
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frontier:_Elite_II all about one of the best games ever made.
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2)Dungeon Master

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In contrast to the traditional turn-based approach that was, in 1987, most common, Dungeon Master added real-time combat elements (akin to Active Time Battle).[8] Other factors in immersion were the use of sound effects to indicate when a creature was nearby, and (primitive) dynamic lighting. Abstract Dungeons and Dragons style experience points and levels were eschewed in favor of a system where the characters' skills were improved directly via using them. Dungeon Master was not the first game to introduce these features. Dungeons of Daggorath for the TRS-80 Color Computer first employed them in 1982. Dungeon Master was, however, responsible for popularizing these elements. Other features of Dungeon Master included allowing players to directly manipulate objects and the environment by clicking the mouse in the enlarged first-person view.[9] It also introduced some novel control methods including the spell casting system, which involved learning sequences of runes which represented the form and function of a spell's effect. For example, a fireball spell was created by mixing the fire symbol with the wing symbol. This kind of attention to detail and focus on the user interface was typical of the game and helped create an often captivating sense of craft and ingenuity.

Amiga version was released the following year, which was the first video game to use 3D sound effects.

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3)Speedball 2: Brutal Deluxe

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Speedball 2 makes several changes over the original Speedball. Teams have nine players on court rather than five, and targets on the floor and walls can be hit to receive bonus points. The number of points that a team receives for scoring a goal starts at 10 but can be increased to 15 or 20 via the use of score multipliers located on the walls of the pitch. The same number of points for scoring a goal is given for injuring a player from the opposing team. When a player is injured, he is replaced by one of three substitutes. If all three substitutes are injured, the injured player will be forced to return to the game and play on in spite of his injuries. There are five game modes: knockout, cup, league, practice and multiplayer. Each game lasts for 180 seconds.

In 1994, PC Gamer US named Speedball 2 the 24th best computer game ever. The editors wrote, "You just can't beat this game for pure action."[10] That same year, PC Gamer UK named it the 30th best computer game of all time, calling it "totally convincing and very stylish".[11]

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4)Wingcommander
I first played this on my amiga there is a lot of disk swaping it's a 3 disk game. I had 2 ext flopy drives so it did not effect me. It's a bit annoying on this emulator to swap disks but it's still one of the best games i played back in the day on my amiga

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The player takes the role of a nameless pilot aboard the TCS Tiger's Claw, a Bengal-class Strike Carrier. The player gets to name the pilot and choose his call sign. The pilot (known in-production to Origin personnel as "Bluehair", after his most notable feature) quickly rises through the ranks of the flight wing and (presuming the player performs ideally in the cockpit) eventually leads a strike on the Kilrathi High Command starbase in the Venice system. On the other hand, if the player does not perform optimally, missions become increasingly defensive in nature, and eventually the Claw is forced to retreat. Of the two endings, the "winning" path is established as canon by the game's two expansion packs, as well as the sequel, Wing Commander II: Vengeance of the Kilrathi.

Wing Commander: The Secret Missions
In the add-on's plot, the Tiger's Claw, on maneuvers in the Goddard System, receives an abortive distress call from Goddard colony. When the Claw arrives, though, nothing is left but wreckage and corpses; a quarter of a million colonists have been killed. Confed realizes that this is the work of a new Kilrathi weapon, the "Graviton weapon", which is able to increase the power of gravity by over a hundred times. Clever work by the Claw's crew and pilots allows them to capture a Kilrathi courier ship, which reveals that this weapon is mounted on an entirely new class of ship; CNC codenames it the Sivar-class dreadnought, after the Kilrathi god of war. Bluehair leads the strike against the Sivar and destroys it in the Vigrid system; for unexplained reasons, ships of that class and armament are never seen again.

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5)Simcity and bonus simcity II
What many might not know this was released first for the amiga
Wright and Braun returned to Brøderbund to formally clear the rights to the game in 1988, when SimCity was near completion. After Brøderbund executives Gary Carlston and Don Daglow saw SimCity, they signed Maxis to a distribution deal for both of its initial games. With that, four years after initial development, SimCity was released for the Amiga and Macintosh platforms, followed by the IBM PC and Commodore 64 later in 1989.[14]

I did not have a dos pc at the time this was the only way i could play this great game one that i spent many months years on my amiga
Dont expect the snes version this is like the dos pc version with slightly better graphics.
gameplay

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The objective of SimCity is to build and design a city, without specific goals to achieve. The player can mark land as being zoned as commercial, industrial, or residential, add buildings, change the tax rate, build a power grid, build transportation systems and take many other actions, in order to enhance the city. Once able to construct buildings in a particular area, the too-small-to-see residents, known as "Sims",[4] may choose to construct and upgrade houses, apartment blocks, light or heavy industrial buildings, commercial buildings, hospitals, churches, and other structures. The Sims make these choices based on such factors as traffic levels, adequate electrical power, crime levels, and proximity to other types of buildings—for example, residential areas next to a power plant will seldom appreciate to the highest grade of housing.[5] In the Super NES version and later, the player can also build rewards when they are given to them, such as a mayor's mansion or a casino.

The player may face disasters including flooding, tornadoes, fires (often from air disasters or shipwrecks), earthquakes and attacks by monsters. In addition, monsters and tornadoes can trigger train crashes by running into passing trains.


Bonus version This version works on this emulator but there is a lot fo disk swapping at first.

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V.2.0 This version has been enhanced with the ability to switch tile sets. A tile set consists of all the images the game uses to draw the city, and by changing the tile set one can give the city a different look and feel. The graphics support up to 64 colors in Extra Halfbrite mode.
Because of this new functionality, SimCity 2 requires at least 1MB of memory, twice that of the original version.

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6)Turrican (1990)(Rainbow Arts)[extended adf]
the best version of this game ever made it started on the c64 this version has wonderfull graphics and sound and gameplay
Turrican can be described as a cross between Metroid and Psycho-Nics Oscar.[11] While the huge levels and the morph-ball function were inspired by Metroid, the overall graphics design and weapons were inspired by Psycho-Nics Oscar. Unlike many other action games of its time, Turrican did not force the player to complete a linear level. Instead, the player can explore each level and uncover secrets.

The Spectrum version was voted number 36 in the Your Sinclair Readers' Top 100 Games of All Time.[12]

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7)Lasersquad
The forerunner to games like UFO XCOM i loved this game one of the best
gameplay

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Laser Squad is a turn-based tactics war game where the player completes objectives such as rescue or retrieval operations, or simply eliminating all of the enemy by taking advantage of cover, squad level military tactics, and careful use of weaponry. The squad's team members are maneuvering around a map one at a time, taking actions such as move, turn, shoot, pick up and so on that use up the unit's action points. More heavily laden units may tire more easily, and may have to rest to avoid running out of action points more quickly in subsequent turns. Morale also plays a factor; a unit witnessing the deaths of his teammates can panic and run out of the player's control.

The original Target Games 8-bit release came with the first three missions with an expansion pack offered via mail order for the next two. The subsequent Blade Software 8-bit release included these as standard; the mail order expansion pack now offered was for missions six and seven instead. Both offers covered cassette and floppy disk versions. As well as featuring new scenarios, the expansion packs included additional weapons as part of the scenarios.

Including the expansion pack, there are seven scenarios in total, each one with its own difficulty settings and squad allocation:

"The Assassins" - The mission's objective is to assassinate weapons manufacturer Sterner Regnix. The player will lead a small squad of troops on an infiltration mission, dealing with droid patrols.
"Moonbase Assault" - A small squad must penetrate the Omni Corporation moon base, via the airlocks, and destroy their computer systems.
"Rescue from the Mines" - After a routine mission goes badly wrong, three members of a squad are held prisoner in the Metallix Corp mines. A squad of troops must negotiate the mine complex, free all three prisoners and escape.
"The Cyber Hordes" - A small squad must defend a station from the attack of an advancing droid squad invasion. The base holds seven stabilizer cores vital to the planet's stability and the droids have focused their efforts on these targets.
"Paradise Valley" - Following on from "The Cyber Hordes", the destruction of the stabilizer cores has left the colony in ruins and assault ships hover above waiting for the time of attack. To prevent capture of the blueprints for an advanced starfighter, the data has been transferred onto a portable security device and a squad is given the task of escaping from the colony with the device.
"The Stardrive" - A group of mercenaries have captured a stardrive controller. A squad must go to their hidden base and retrieve the device.
"Laser Platoon" - A free for all deathmatch as equal teams are pitted against each other. Large (10-man) squads, with reinforcements arriving frequently, hunt down the equally equipped opposition


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8) Turrican 2
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wFtLGDywZlg great playthru
Turrican II: The Final Fight is the second game of the Turrican series. The game by Factor 5 was released in 1991 for the Commodore Amiga. This version was finished before the C64 version, but Manfred Trenz cites the C64 version as the original design. Turrican II was also released for the CDTV, Atari ST, Amstrad CPC and ZX Spectrum, and later for DOS, and also for the Mega Drive/Genesis and Game Boy rebranded as Universal Soldier.
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9)Lords of Chaos
Gameplay

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Before embarking on the game's levels, the player is asked to design a wizard. This is done by splitting experience points amongst mana, action points, stamina, constitution, combat, defense and magic resistance. Remaining experience points are spent on spells. Spells may be offensive in nature (Magic Bolt, Curse), potions (Speed Potion, Healing Potion), utility (Teleport, magic Eye) or summoning (Goblin, Unicorn, etc.). These spells continue the theme from Chaos and include some of that game's more unusual elements (Gooey Blob, for example). After completing each scenario, the player may spend accumulated experience points to further improve their wizard.

The aim of each level of the game is for a player's wizard to reach a portal which appears after a preset number of turns. To do this, the player's wizard and creatures move around a map composed of square tiles, each of which represents one of various terrain types (for example, forest or the wall of a building). During a player's turn, only the parts of the map which that player's wizard or creatures have previously seen are shown, thus leading to other human players having to look away from the screen during each turn to avoid learning information they "shouldn't" know. Points are awarded for a player's wizard reaching the portal, for holding items of treasure (for example, valuable gems) when the wizard reaches the portal, or for enemy creatures killed during the level. Each level ends when all wizards have reached the portal or been killed, or when the portal disappears after a fixed number of turns (in which case all the remaining wizards lose). During each turn, each creature has a fixed number of action points which it can use to accomplish actions, for example moving, fighting hand-to-hand or shooting ranged weapons. When a creature's action points are used up for the turn, it can take no further actions until all the players have had a turn.

The game came shipped with three scenarios: "The Many Coloured Land" provided both indoor and outdoor environments; "Slayer's Dungeon" was a traditional monster-inhabited dungeon containing a powerful sword; "Ragaril's Domain" was single-player only, set in a trap-filled palace. An expansion pack was also available if purchased directly from Mythos Games which contained two further scenarios: "Islands of Iris" and "Tombs of the Undead", the latter being single-player only.

A demonstration scenario called "Escape From Zol" was released on the covers of Your Sinclair and Zero magazines. It was single-player only and very similar in style to "Ragaril's Domain" where you had to escape from a trap-filled building. However, even if the player won, their wizard's experience could not be used in the other five scenarios.

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10)Elite
I started playing this on my c64 and was one of the main things i got an amiga for but eliteII to you can spend a life time playing this is were it started

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The player initially controls the character "Commander Jameson",[19] though the name can be changed each time the game is saved. The player starts at Lave Station with 100 credits and a lightly armed trading ship, a Cobra Mark III.[1] Most of the ships that the player encounters are similarly named after snakes or other reptiles.[20] Credits can be accumulated through a number of means. These include piracy, trade,[1] military missions, bounty hunting and asteroid mining. The money generated by these enterprises allows the player to upgrade their ship with enhancements such as better weapons, increased cargo capacity, an automated docking system, an extra energy bank and more.[21]

In the game universe, stars have single planets, each with a space station in its orbit. Stars are always separated by interstellar distances effectively untraversable using the ship's sublight engines. Travel between stars is accomplished by hyperspace jumps, and is constrained to those within range of the limited fuel capacity (a maximum of 7 light years) of the ship's hyperdrive. Sublight fuel capacity is apparently infinite.[22]

Fuel can be replenished after docking with a space station, which requires matching the ship's rotation to that of the station before entering the docking bay[19] - a task that can be avoided by purchasing a docking computer. Equipment upgrades include a fuel scoop, which allows raw fuel to be skimmed from the surface of stars,[22] described by the manual as "a dangerous and difficult activity", but in practice a fairly simple process far easier than manually docking at a space station—and collecting free-floating cargo canisters and escape capsules liberated after the destruction of other ships.[23]

While making a hyperspace jump between star systems, the antagonistic Thargoid[24] insect race may intercept the player half way, forcing the player's ship to remain in "witch-space" and do battle with their smaller invasion ships. As the interrupted jump uses the full journey's fuel, the player may have insufficient fuel to subsequently jump to a nearby planet, trapping them in witch-space and they must use an escape capsule if owned, or abort the game and reload.[25]

An extremely expensive one-shot galactic hyperspace upgrade permits travel between the eight galaxies of the game universe. There is little practical difference between the different galaxies. However, in some versions it is necessary to travel to at least the second galaxy to access the game's missions. The planetary layout of the galaxies is different, and many players discovered trade runs between closely positioned planets with fortuitous economic combinations.

Most versions of Elite included several optional missions for the Galactic Navy.[24] One requires tracking down and destroying a stolen experimental ship;[20] another involves transporting classified information on the Thargoids' home planet, with Thargoid invasion ships doing their best to see that you do not succeed throughout the duration of the mission involving multiple interplanetary jumps.[26] Rewards differed depending on the mission - from cash, gems to esoteric hardware such as a cloaking device.



Hope you enjoy :) I had to do a lot of testing to get these working versions also the emulator is bit modded there is no menu music i found it annoying after about 5 hours.. also has a much later bios lets other games work.
Last edited by Ian Micheal on Sat Aug 03, 2019 5:56 pm, edited 4 times in total.

User avatar
aldair
Metallic
Posts: 802

Re: Amiga Uae4all rc3 My Top 10 best working games Disk

Post#2 » Fri Aug 02, 2019 9:52 am

Thank you, testing !!!

User avatar
aldair
Metallic
Posts: 802

Re: Amiga Uae4all rc3 My Top 10 best working games Disk

Post#3 » Fri Aug 02, 2019 9:59 am

Can you improve mame4allrc2's roms?

User avatar
Ian Micheal
Developer
Posts: 5994
Contact:

Re: Amiga Uae4all rc3 My Top 10 best working games Disk

Post#4 » Fri Aug 02, 2019 10:26 am

This is just my top 10 if wanted i can make a disk with working roms normal that people might know. Also games names of roms must be under 15 letters i found or the menu does not show them..

Speed should be good this is the last one he did rc3 it has more speed. Real dreamcast keyboard works and loading workbench savestates which is really nice. has virtual keyboard as well mouse is emulated or a real one .

you need to reset after loading each game. not the dreamcast just using left trigger. i will write a guide for it soon.\

Bonus games 1 is cannon fodder 1 it's a 4 disk game so disk swapping. also bonus trainer disk.

247
Sega RPG
Posts: 609

Re: Amiga Uae4all rc3 My Top 10 best working games Disk

Post#5 » Fri Aug 02, 2019 12:43 pm

Already have done this, and if people want i may post my selection to download :)


User avatar
Anthony817
Shark Patrol
Posts: 4009

Re: Amiga Uae4all rc3 My Top 10 best working games Disk

Post#7 » Fri Aug 02, 2019 4:33 pm

You guys might want to ask Ripfire about if he did one too, because I remember back in 2011 he released Chui's emulators with rom packs over at Snesorama. I think this was one he did but not 100% sure. I don't think I still have any of them from that time period on my backup drive as I didn't seriously start archiving this stuff until last year.
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User avatar
Ian Micheal
Developer
Posts: 5994
Contact:

Re: Amiga Uae4all rc3 My Top 10 best working games Disk

Post#8 » Fri Aug 02, 2019 4:42 pm

Anthony817 wrote:You guys might want to ask Ripfire about if he did one too, because I remember back in 2011 he released Chui's emulators with rom packs over at Snesorama. I think this was one he did but not 100% sure. I don't think I still have any of them from that time period on my backup drive as I didn't seriously start archiving this stuff until last year.



It's very hard to find games that work i tryed 100's they might boot up but they crash or dont work right. You really have to test them i could just made rom paks i have over 10000 adf files. also brandnew amiga games in the last 10 years even from 2019.

I wanted to have only a disk with games that work. i have seen disks with 400 games about 30 work on them.

yeah 2 turrican disks are my modded disks so i know no one has those. emulator is modded as well..

247
Sega RPG
Posts: 609

Re: Amiga Uae4all rc3 My Top 10 best working games Disk

Post#9 » Fri Aug 02, 2019 5:12 pm

Well i have a 30 kbs upload, so it will be very long but will be happy to do it...

User avatar
Ian Micheal
Developer
Posts: 5994
Contact:

Re: Amiga Uae4all rc3 My Top 10 best working games Disk

Post#10 » Fri Aug 02, 2019 5:20 pm

247 wrote:Well i have a 30 kbs upload, so it will be very long but will be happy to do it...


Mine is about that now to I would love it :) thank you sure others would to:)

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