Nice article, thoughI was a bit surprised that the only computer - except for x86 machines - represented in this article is the MSX (which was not the most successfull, despite many great games -- thx Konami
)
You may include these :
- most 8bit Commodore computers (PET, Vic20, C64, C128, C+/4...) :
Vice
- Amstrad CPC :
XCPC
- Atari ST :
Hatari
- Amiga / CD32 :
E-UAE
- Apple IIGS :
KEGS/SDL
- 68k Macintosh :
BasiliskII JIT. MacOS 7.something is available for free download somewhere on Apple website...
I would add
O2EM, which emulates Odyssey² (known as Philips Videopac in Europe, or as Brandt Jopac), though compiling the last sources require some modifications.
I also like
Xe which emulates several systems : Megadrive/Genesis, Master System, Wonderswan and others...
One could also consider virtual machines (though they are not emulators) to play some old games such as :
- SCUMM-VM for many adventure games, mainly those from Lucas, but also Adventure Soft or Revolution Soft. More and more games are added, notably Delphine Soft (Future Wars, Operation Stealth) and Sierra/Coktel (Gobliiins series).
- Exult enables to play Ultima VII and Ultima VII Part 2. Many visual and sound enhancements for games that could be pretty hard to run on a real MS DOS box.
- Pentagram is made by some people from the Exult team. Their goal is to enable people to play Ultima VIII on modern hardware (maybe Crusader series?)
- X Frotz for Z-Machine games (text-adventuer games mainly from Infocom such as H2G2, Planetfall etc.)