Sweet composition. I've been wanting to make split-screen oscilloscope videos for my chiptune creations, but it usually involves hacking around with stuff that I'm no good at.
@@RushJet1 Sorry to resurrect an old comment thread, but if you could please help me to understand something here. If a single channel's left and right audio can play two distinct parts at once, then can't a case be made that you've effectively split that channel into two, and can thereby have an effective eight channels by using this technique on all four? Unless I'm misunderstanding any and all limitations about composing for the left and right on a single channel (for example, are the two sides restricted to using the same programmed data, i.e. you can only achieve an echo or reverb using this method [as I think you've done with this track]?) Thanks.
@@RushJet1 I see, so there is no true polyphony on a single channel -- only bouncing back and forth between left and right in quick succession. Thanks for clearing that up.
beautiful! gotta admire the ingenuity of people who can make music with these basic waves
This is why you should play the Game Boy with headphones.
Man I love this one. Probably better than my other favourite 'Return to control'!
Sweet composition. I've been wanting to make split-screen oscilloscope videos for my chiptune creations, but it usually involves hacking around with stuff that I'm no good at.
This is really good!
This is insane!
Link is down
fixed. dropbox changed their public folders a couple years ago so there are probably many broken links.
If the Gameboy has the capabilities of transmitting differently on both channels...
DOES THAT MEAN IT HAS 8 VOICES???
No, it can only play audio from Left, Right, or both at the same time
@@RushJet1 Sorry to resurrect an old comment thread, but if you could please help me to understand something here. If a single channel's left and right audio can play two distinct parts at once, then can't a case be made that you've effectively split that channel into two, and can thereby have an effective eight channels by using this technique on all four? Unless I'm misunderstanding any and all limitations about composing for the left and right on a single channel (for example, are the two sides restricted to using the same programmed data, i.e. you can only achieve an echo or reverb using this method [as I think you've done with this track]?) Thanks.
@@HarmoniChris yeah each channel can only pay one note at any given time regardless of stereo. You can't split them
@@RushJet1 I see, so there is no true polyphony on a single channel -- only bouncing back and forth between left and right in quick succession. Thanks for clearing that up.