Posted on September 19, 1997
Sega Game Gear – MasterGear
Mastergear version 1.0 has superior performance to previous versions, decent compatibility, acceptable audio, and runs at full speed on today’s systems. https://fms.komkon.org/MG
Posted on September 12, 1997
Amiga – darkNES emulator
Another NES emulator for Amiga is darkNES v0.22, a Windows version of the Linux emulator of the same name.
Posted on September 7, 1997
Commodore 64 – Free64
This Commodore emulator version 0.1 is written in C and emulates sound quite well and has decent compatibility
Posted on August 25, 1997
Nintendo – Famicom
After a long wait, a new Nes emulator is released, it’s called Famicom in version 0.4e updated to 20 mappers, fast and with good audio
Posted on August 23, 1997
Commodore 64 – Frodo
This C64 emulator named Frodo, in version Frodo v4.1, has been ported to Unix, MacOS, BeOS, AmigaOS, RiscOS, and now Windows. It emulates the Commodore 64 very well.
Posted on August 22, 1997
Amiga – darkNES emulator
Another NES emulator for Amiga is darkNES v0.21, a Windows version of the Linux emulator of the same name.
Posted on August 21, 1997
Amiga – coolNES Emulator
coolNES version 0.49 is the fastest NES emulator for the Amiga and offers numerous features, including sound, a graphical interface, state saving, and internal IPS support. This version can handle 29 mappers.
Posted on August 20, 1997
Amiga – Chip 8
A new version 1.0 of the Chip8 Amiga emulator Vision-8 written by Marcel De Kogel has been released, and has been ported to many different systems. It’s a full-featured emulator that works on any 286, even with a… Read More
Posted on August 18, 1997
Nintendo – madNES
A new emulator has appeared on the horizon called madNES for MS-DOS. It supports a decent number of mappers and has primitive audio support. It also has preliminary support for light guns and joysticks.
Posted on August 16, 1997
Arcade – Juno First Emulator
Version 1.11 – Fixed a bug which causes a crash due to Juno First selecting the 4th character set in test mode, when there are only 3. Thanks to Cameron Mac Millan for helping with this one.