Thank you so much for this video. I was strongly considering a Mega65 after your previous video; but today you sealed the deal (although my new PC build is going to have to suffer some budget cutbacks to fund the purchase). A while back you put out a video asking whether it is time to save the original hardware some wear and tear, and use modern equivalents. That video resonated with me, because whilst there is something special about using original hardware, there is also an element of wanting to make sure it lasts for as long as possible. Getting it out for use would become a rather special occasion. Nothing available however, really did the job well enough. The emulation platforms do a remarkable job, but it still is never quite right. The technical wonder that is FPGA has opened so many doors over the past few years. Sure, things need more work, but the foundational hardware is there to really use a modern hardware setup. And significantly, all in a single cased unit. As a child I never had any of the Sinclair equipment (it was sometimes a lonely existence having a C64 surrounded by 48k and +2 kids), and whilst I wouldn't have swapped my C64 for any of the Sinclair releases, I've always had a bit of a soft spot for them. When there are working Speccy cores, I'd definitely have them in my regular rotation. Perhaps somebody will be able to create cores for the BBC Micro, and the Acorn Electron for some classroom nostalgia... The Mega65 offers what I want from a retro computer now. Something I can have setup on my desk, along with my work computers and games consoles that allows me to enjoy my childhood, without a load of fuss. And who knows, I first learned to program on a C64; maybe the game I'm about to start work on can sprout a retro side project version. Maybe I could finally write my first real C64 game, with an enhanced Mega65 version. If I can find the time to resurrect what little assembly ability I have. Anyhow, thank you (and all the Fractics) for the hard work you all put in. You never fail to hit me square in the nostalgia feels. Much love from back in Ole' Blighty.
I love this kind of perspective. Firstly I'm glad you feel that way about the vids. But also the machine. It makes me appreciate it all the more to see it through the eyes of someone looking for a modern way to replicate the physical hardware feel of the real things, without wearing them out and dealing with the maintenance. I agree, this is currently the best option we have that comes in a truly retro shell. BTW the Speccy core is now available, as should pop up in a correction to this video. I hope you can get hold of a MEGA 65 and enjoy it! Thanks for commenting.
It’s always interesting to read what I assume is a British perspective. I know the Spectrum was popular over there but wasn’t the UK one of Commodore’s biggest market? Here in Australia, the C64 was hands down the most popular home computer of the 80s, followed by the Apple IIe / IIc. The only way I knew the Spectrum existed was because many of the C64 game boxes showed the screenshots on the back of the different platforms. I remember being confused why they made games for a computer no one had (I didn’t realise it was a British phenomenon until years later). To this day I’ve never seen a Spectrum (any model) in the flesh. Which is funny because I now have a Sinclair QL in my collection - a computer even the English turned their noses up at.
Thanks for watching! Considering the cost of FPGAs (over $200 each) not to mention the mechanical keyboard & floppy drive, & all the machine can do, do you agree with my conclusions and review score?
"Considering 1 of the 2 FPGAs costs $380 alone" An elevated price due to the chip shortage. The two FPGAs used are out of stock with long lead times at both Mouser and Digikey. Octopart shows that the few places that have them are charging as much as double the normal price. Commander X16 apparently isn't as greatly affected since it was, by luck, designed to use more common, less exotic chips which I assume avoid the chip shortage? I'd like to see a tabular comparison of the Commander X16 versus MEGA65 - graphics, sound, benchmarks, etc.
Home computers were very cut down to fit a price but were not cheap. I think this is worth the money if you look at it as a boosted 1980's home computer. Obviously expensive compared to an old PC.
I agree 4/5 is fair, possibly even generous in the present state but the potential is certainly there as the platform grows and matures. My impression is that the price MEGA paid for the FPGAs (at least for the first batch) is closer to $200 than to $400 because their manufacturing/distribution partner Trenz is a large Xilinx customer and is being very generous because of the non-profit status and uniqueness of the project. I'm very satisfied with mine, but I do feel like I have to warn people that it's very much a work in progress and you're buying into an ongoing project, not a finished product. The pretty box and printed manual can give some people the wrong impression in that regard, though they also really add to the "Christmas 1982" feeling/experience when you get one. The MEGA team worked hard for that.
Compared to the plain blue screen that faced me when I first received my C-64 40 years ago (+ 2 weeks), this would have blown my mind with the amount of things that can be done just "in the box". Great overview!
Dang, RR's voice is so relaxing and calm, he's like the Bob Ross of retro computing. Ladies be like, "Oh I am totally subscribed." Nice work mate! Love your show!
I really love how FPGAs have been adopted for bringing cool retro style things to life. Not in the budget to get one of these for the moment but some day perhaps. Thanks for all the fun and high quality videos you always put out there.
Yeah, great stuff. Getting cheaper and more and more attractive for hobbyists. Take $100 and you are in the game (see the F4PGA open source toolchain with the suggested architectures, if you or others are interested. BTW just a suggestion, there are a plethora of possibly "victims" on the market). But the note on the text card ( 1:59 ) is not true. If you are generous, you may say that the routing is similar to that of an ASIC or Standard IC (but that is not true, since with an FPGA works via nets and predefined units). In any case, the assertion regarding the SID Soundchip is questionable (meaning wrong), since FPGAs only have analog components on board in (very very very and expensive) special cases, which would contradict the role as a field programmable gate(!) array. Under no circumstances are these identical or similar with the analog circuit hardware that is integrated into a SID chip. Conclusion: Doesn't matter/Who cares?:) The emulation can finally be just as good or indistinguishable from the original. That is even the goal of an emulation.
I have to admit, I'm super impressed at what they pulled off here. My one and only minor regret is it not being able to wear the Commodore badge. I wish the owners of that would licence it more. I don't think I'll be buying this though - I can't make my vintage computing problem worse by expanding into retrotech. But I'm glad these excellent two videos give me a really good taste of the thing.
Thanks and big applause! Normally I can hardly stand watching more than some 2 minutes of videos of this type, you know, with somebody talking and presenting stuff for half an hour or more. But you with your real pleasant voice, technical solid background in combination with this interesting topic: got me, I watched the whole thing, liked it and subscribed. And now I'm thinking of ways on how to convince my wife that buying a MEGA 65 is a great idea :)
Well there's not much to explain. One of the chips costs 380AUD when it's in stock. www.digikey.com.au/en/products/detail/amd-xilinx/XC7A200T-1FBG484C/3925796
@@RetroRecipes that's $380 in AUD not USD. Switch the currency on that page to USD and it's about $250. I thought that price seemed high but assumed it was supply chain issues driving the price up since the last time I'd looked.
Commodore had the weirdest R&D and marketing schemes. The Mega65 is something that would’ve been a weird one next to the Amiga and ST… much like the 128 was a very daft marketing strategy. The MEGA65 would’ve been great in 1984/1985 but it was planned for 88/89 (oh I see 91.. pffff) right? And when it would’ve been cheaper than the ST it would’ve stand a chance. But the Mega65 team did awesome with that handbook! A lovely retro spiral bound book… goosebumps!
Honestly, it's beautiful. I mean, we often complain that today's world, technology is focused around money, greed etc. but projects like this Mega 65 show that there are still some passionate human beings who are able to create fantastic, truly unique projects. To me, this is not a computer project anymore, it's more like pure (tech) art :) I love the feeling of it. It feels like it teleported from some parallel world, when Amiga never appeared, but instead Mega65 was the next release after C64 :)
Peri, while watching you experience the M65 I felt I was looking in the mirror (and liked what I saw for a change). I had a very similar rush of nostalgia and real joy experiencing the machine. But I also deeply felt your concluding frustrations over what a typical user might try to do (like, you know, load a physical disk in the disk drive). I think I spent most of my couple of days simply loading software to get it to run. Once done, it was a game of (blissful) whack-a-mole seeing what worked and what didn't and trying to learn the new user flow. After going through most of the demos and software I ultimately felt like I was ready to wait a bit. And if that meant coming back in 6 months or even a year, I was comfortable with that. I'd waited this long, what was another year? If I was a programmer I think I'd be trying to create for this machine if I had the time and skill. As a user, I hope someone out there (Shallan? Vogt? Sanderson? Someone else?) creates that "killer app" we all are proud to say, "Yep! I was here first. I knew it all along. What took you so long?" And it leaves everyone else jealous of our being early-adopters. But even if that never happens, I'm so so happy to have seen this project come this far. And to be able to call myself a believer, and fan.
Hi mate, I’m glad you got the nostalgic kick out of this that I hoped for viewers. It will be fun watching where this machine goes. And I will of course revisit and share with the community as always 🙌
I love the design of the shell. Putting the floppy disk drive on the right side reminds me the Amstrad CPC 664 and Lord Sugar's "all in one" concept. The FPGA inside makes it extremely flexible, as well. Great video Chris, as always.
Is it HD or DD disks ? I have 10 HD disks in my bookshelf but i have to idea where to get DD disks anymore. Amiga was DD if i remember correctly. HD didn't work.
@@SirGeldi the drive is HD but currently the core/ROM support DD only. Users have reported success with HD disks as long as you cover the HD hole with opaque tape (the difference between the magnetic properties of DD and HD 3.5" is much less than between DD and HD 5.25"). Work was started on HD support with a custom format that may support around 3MB on a standard 1.44MB HD floppy, but then the first batch of machines were released and the chip shortage got worse so the team has had other priorities dealing with unforeseen issues and trying to get the next batches out. I'm looking forward to it when they have a chance to get back to it.
@17:22 "Your Mega65 will self-destruct in 5 seconds." I wasn't expecting anything after that reference to Mission Impossible so I chose that moment to turn away to have a bite of chocolate, and then jumped slightly out of my seat at the noise of the explosion!
To get a directory listing, you oughtta try DIRECTORY or CATALOG command. At least one of those were in Basic 7.0 on the C-128, so should be available on this more advanced version of BASIC.
@@RetroRecipes are you a time traveler? Thiesi 19 minutes ago Retro Recipes 25 minutes ago It’s pretty miraculous all round honestly! how did you answer the question 6 minutes before he answered
Fully agree. But mostly only interesting for really fans of the C64. For those of us that only remember it from our youth and never had a C64, the price seems too high when you think you can play most game titles on a Pi without a problem.
If I had one of these I would want to see what I could do with the updated basic and improved sprite handling! The question for me is which would I want more, this or the Commanderx16?! Ugh!!!! Too much cool stuff!!! Thanks for the review!
What an incredible retro-computer is this MEGA 65. I wish I had enough room for a CRT monitor so I could learn and play with this gem like with my Amiga 500 back then :)
@@wayland7150 native outputs are VGA and "Digital Video" (unlicensed/uncertified HDMI), though because the main core's output resolutions are 720x480@60 Hz or 720x576@50 Hz, compatibility with flat panel VGA and DVI/HDMI monitors can sometimes be iffy as not all of them support those EDTV (progressive scan SD) resolutions.
@@Pseudoplasmagore not all monitors like the MEGA65. It outputs some weird video modes that would be fine on old CRT monitors but aren't supported by all flat panel monitors/TVs. Some monitors I've tried only work in the 50hz mode or the 60hz mode but not both.
Enjoyed your review and the time you took to share your MEGA65 journey :) Some things I can share. Right now, to my ears, the 8580 SID sounds better than the 6581 SID (this will probably improve over time). Also, the background story on the intro-disk, we were thinking it would be a nice way to showcase what the community had created for the year. So yes, many of us are cutting our teeth with the new system, learning the ropes, and I'm looking forward to seeing the 1st gen coders get more and more ambitious over time :) We're also hoping the intro disks will be an annual thing, to showcase the community's creations each year :)
That’s some great insight into the decisions, thanks! I can see that the demo programs are more about showcasing the cool community than the machine’s ultimate capabilities. Keep up the great work.
Once again, superb work here Mr Fractic! A fully entertaining, educating and fair review of the Mega65...only a true artist integrates an unexpected falling Duracell battery into the final cut😄Loved it. Also, many thanks for the mention, yes the Raster Rewrite Buffer sprite demo and Blaster are a couple of my creations for the machine. I hope others are inspired to check out the Mega65 in more detail - there is an no-cost emulator (xemu), so people can "dip their toe" in Mega65 water first. Great work and thank you again.
Man, this computer comes with a detailed handbook and the new laptop I bought for my parents didn't even have a full spec sheet. Only a "manual" with some rudimentary information.
I’m endlessly fascinated by the fact that many Brits seemed to call the C128 the Commodore “one two eight”, whereas here in Canada I’m used to hearing it called the Commodore “one twenty-eight”.
The direct translation of common way we say it in Finland would be "hundred two eight" ;p Trust me, in Finnish it rolls off ones tongue better than the ones you mentioned would ;) Also the way we pronounce is not using the "proper" ("book-language" or "literal") spelling of the Finnish words for two and eight. Just thought if you're fascinated by that, you might also enjoy this technically not very useful tidbit of knowledge ;)
@@robsku1 That is interesting, thank for sharing that! :) As an aside, are infrared saunas becoming popular in Finland? I've tried both, and I *vastly* prefer infrared saunas.
Great review, my friend! I really was looking forward to this episode. I also ported my renderer into BASIC 10. Very advanced Commodore BASIC dialect and a joy to program! Thank you for your dedication and effort you put into this video. Its a great machine!
FWIW, the ESC-T/ESC-B window stuff also works on the C128's native mode. Lots of powerful ESC sequences on that. ESC-@ to clear to end of screen, ESC-A to activate insert mode, ESC-C to get back out of it . . .
Grundig VS300 series VCRs (built around '85-'86) default to 3 : 7 (three, blank, colon, 7, blank). The internal state machine fixes this to 38:00 the next minute. Two hours later it rolls from 39:59 over to 30:00. It then counts normally up until it hits 39:59 again. It never goes back to any sane time (unless you set the clock, that is).
Very happy to see your nostalgia way up high like that! You make me smile when you are having retro fun, probably cause Im the same geeky way. Thanks for the video my friend showing off what the Mega65 can do. At that price it's not for me, but I can see where the love and joy comes for those that purchase one. Well done :)
I think the aspect ratio was adjusted because it thinks its on a wide screen monitor since most of us no longer have the CRTs anymore. But I will bet there is an option for that aspect ratio if you go back to that initial setup screen.
The text windowing via Esc codes has been there since the plus/4 and C128-pretty handy if you want to have a scrolling or otherwise mutable output window in a BASIC program without disturbing the rest of the screen.
This system needs a warning sticker. It would cause sleep deprivation and skipped meals in my case. Wow, can't get over what is possible for a next gen C64.
17:31 reminds me of my favorite show of all time, BBC's Life on Mars! I'm so tempted to get a Mega65. Super cool machine. Thanks for the video Perifractic!
It's got the instant usability that the 1980's home computers had with ROM cartridges. It's got the ability to change personalities into other 80's and 90's microcomputers. I'd say it's pretty good but there are other new 80's machines that do this sort of thing too. If you were a whizz on those and want to use those skills again then having an 80's machine you know only 40 times faster is very cool.
Nice video! That "restore" key behaviour that you observed appears to be true to original hardware. The "restore" key on an original VIC-20 or C64 or C128 will interrupt the CPU with a Non Maskable Interrupt (NMI) subroutine. I presume they replicated this on the Mega65. Some games can recover from an NMI. However, timing critical sound, video and disk routines will typically glitch out if not crash out.
Woohaa! Thanks for featuring my game! Score or Die :D It was originally made for some shallans challenge if i remember correctly :D And it is not Basic game. I used TRSE, so it is dialect of pascal. I never used pascal before this so it took whopping 8 hours to make it happen. btw, i actually care for hardware so in game menu Mega65 is running only 3.5MHz but for some reason gameloop runs full speed 40MHz ;)
My Mom was a schoolteacher so my early childhood computing was mostly done on her classroom's luggable Apple IIc. When we got our own home computer it was an Apple IIGS. It was backward compatible and had all of the capabilities of the Apple II with the added graphics and sound enhancements of the IIGS on 16-bit IIGS exclusive software. The MEGA 65 feels like if the C64 were to have had a IIGS-like successor.
WOW! What a great looking machine. Aesthetically it looks awesome and the functionality looks out of this world. Where can I get me one of those beauties! Perifractic you are one lucky man indeed, you get to try out some amazing tech and do some wonderful things along the way. Thank you for showing us these remarkable machines 😊
Please remember that C64s were originally designed for NTSC even though they were popular longer in PAL regions. C65 original specs are also based on the NTSC standard with references to YIQ video encoding (PAL uses YUV).
Yes, hence the crappy low percentage of screen use. If it was designed as PAL machine, it would have had either more lines of text, or more lines per character. With PAL you could show 256 progressive scanlines with ease, so that means 32 lines of the 8 pixel font, or 25 lines with 10 vertical pixels per character for a better readable font. We had a machine with 80 characters x 24 lines of 6x10 pixels. It had way smaller borders. But weird enough the Speccy was even worse with 32x24 characters of 8x8 pixels, and it was designed for PAL from start.
@RR Thank you for bringing us along with you on this journey down a branch of Commodore tech that might have been. Impressive for the time when it should have been realized. Would love to have owned one in ‘87, but I had an Atari 1200XL. Found a wonderland of software for it when my parents took me to Singapore and Hong Kong in ‘86 when I was nearly 16.
Given how you were talking about case molding, I'm assuming you're spearheading the case design for the Commander X16 for when it reaches its smaller form factor. Probably a good experience to check out the pros & cons of this project as the X16 is still in development. Personally, I think the multicore functionality makes its heftier price more reasonable. I went the MiSTer FPGA route because I wanted to cull my desire to buy every system under the sun. Though I can't imagine not having a real C64.
I started on the ZX81 and then the Amiga 500, (edit) How does the C65 stand up against the Amiga 500? some of those games look very colourful compared to some Amiga games using only 128 to 256 colours. I've never used a C64 so I'm confused where this computer C65 fits in on the timeline planned release?
first off, thanks for the great review. a difficult project to demo, not for the casual person getting into the c64 (a-la the fpga emu's and mister @$200) but clearly shows dedication and passion by the team. i'll keep an eye on it for the retro perspective and touchy-feely of actually running "original" tin. love it.
It looks absolutely fine.. but that price point really kills it off for me. I totally understand WHY it costs so much, but that leads to a more existential issue. What's the point and who is the audience? A fun, nostalgia-inducing case with a floppy disc interface. That's it really. There are cheaper ways to go FGPA emulation, with a lot more flexibility. With such limited availability, is there ever really going to be software support? One text adventure does not get me excited. I'm afraid it's an expensive toy as things stand
The former C64 whizz kids have done economically well and are generally prosperous people. This audience will like the machines's features and is also able to afford it. I do think that the price of the Mega65 is its worst enemy, but on the other hand, they have already done wonders to get it available at this price.
Thanks for another video about it, I must say the demo makers did a great job featuring all the hardware functions, that kind of stuff was often missing at platform launches bitd as I don't think many understood what the Amiga was when they first showed it off. I think it's worth the price if you got the money since it does many things like COREs, FPGAs are great but it's bit like the RAM situation in the late 70s to 80s of cost and supply limitations. Although vendors might want to consider layaway options as even a 4-month division can help sell units. It's a very cool machine, I really like the dual SID aspect, often forgotten how long it took to get stereo gaming as everything 8-bit tends to be mono sound only. Also those native graphic modes look sweet, Amiga grade. :D These intermediate models do have appeal but I think we appreciate them more now than we did before. :)
Have you tried a MiSTer FPGA before/yet? It has a zillion cores for retro consoles/handhelds, 8-bit/16-bit/16-32-bit computers including the ZX Spectrum NEXT, and hundreds of arcade board cores. Included are the Amiga, Atari ST, C64, etc. I wonder if the Mega 65 core could be ported to the MiSTer?
@@RetroRecipes The MiSTer Project is community driven rather than company / product-driven and as a result, there are lots of case options that range from self-done 3D-printed designs (including a wedge computer case), to mass-produced metal (Mr. Addons for example), to console-ization (MiSTer Multisystem), to mini-ITX, to JAMMA arcade machine integration. There is even a third-party board for the MiSTer to fit it into an Amiga 500 case (MiSTress) or a repro Amiga case. I've seen someone put it inside of an Atari ST case as well. The variety mostly comes from the DIY folks... although there are a number of MiSTer oriented retailers who offer several pre-configured bundles. I myself prefer the MiSTer Multisystem but I do also have a more traditional "sandwich" setup as well. I'm guessing you have no idea what I'm talking about... but if you are into retro hardware preservation, the MiSTer Project is where its at. That Raspberry Pi-sized, Terasic DE10 Nano board that the MiSTer is based off can do so much stuff. I don't have a solid number to give you, but my best guess is that there are around 600 cores... with a significant chunk of those being arcade board cores. If you can spare the time, check out the list of hardware the MiSTer has cores for. It is kind of mind blowing. For whatever reason, a lot of the arcade cores that are available aren't listed on their wiki... I think because there are so many and they come out all the time, that it is hard to keep up with them all. Doing it an FPGA means parallel execution and input and output latency that matches the original hardware. It's like magic. :)
Wow good video. I love the way it looks and all its features. Back in the day had a good old VIC-20 then C-64 then C128 then lol Amiga A500 Batman pack which sold in UK. Just think what could of done with this bit of kit way back then hmmmmm the mind boggles. Great video be nice to see the things to appear for it.😄
I found it pretty nostalgic when I started messing around with old computers, too... I've really enjoyed going back to using floppy media on these old machines.
I'd really like one to be able to play my childhood memories. Even knowing the cost of manufacter it's just waay to expensive to feel comfortable buying one. Right now they are also in the early adopter phase so if they break it might be a hassle getting it fixed or even worse having to wait for a replacement. But I am really rooting for Mega65. It's great to see such a high quality product come along aside the recent mini remakes console makers have done. You can actually use all the functionality of this machine.
Hi, I wanted to know something. have you tried to load the initial program of the demos and games from the virtual drive? I have a problem with it, the intro with program titles and demos don't load from it! It is loaded correctly only from the main drive!
A score of 4 is just about right IMHO. I only wish it had come out with games that would show the world what this baby can really do. Sound wise, it's very impressive.
Wow great computer. Many of us still pounder the question "What if Commodore Computers was still in business?" Maybe they would be ahead of the pack as they were in the 1980's but with Jack Tramiel gone who knows that future. Thanks again Retro recipes & perifractic
Would have made no difference, the PC was unstoppable by then. It did everything Commodore did, but better, with multiple manufacturers innovating and developing new add-on cards and standards to expand its capabilities. No one company could compete against it and the PC platform swept away all competing micros as it rose to dominance. Only Apple managed to survive by carving out a niche in DTP and music production markets and then thrived by turning towards building wildly successful, easy-to-use mobile devices.
@@little_fluffy_clouds You said it, Apple did survived. With more focus it could've been possible to survive. Direct competition against PCs, I agree, would have been impossible. But, well they are history now.
I've seen this before. It looks VERY cool. Would love to get my hands on one. But for the price I think I'll wait for a little more refinement. I hope that's not a bad choice on my part.
Such a great little unit! I wonder if there are any music trackers (like Amiga's Octamed) for the M65, hopefully we'll get to see you find and review one in a future vid!
A very fair score Perifractic. I would have been tempted to give it 4.5 as I think the audio is fantastic. However, 4 is a very fair score for the whole system.
The built in disk drive is actually a very practical touch. On a PC the disk is far too small capacity and slow but on this machine it's to scale. If my home computer had come with a floppy drive back in 1983 it would have been so much better.
Fascinating stuff. Surprised there was no sound in the Game Boy core, but cool to see that running. Definitely hope there will be more cores available (maybe even the C-One cores could be ported across?) Makes me want a MEGA 65 even more having seen this .
I added a correction that they said there should be sound and it may have been an issue with my video capture set up. Still a bit strange but definitely possible. I hope you can get hold of one in the future! Let me know if that GameBoy sound works ;-)
I recently got a Commodore CRT and don't really like to use it because the high pitched noise from the deflectoin coils is much louder than I remembered, hard to bear, argh! Now I'm using the HDMI converter again with worse image, but much nicer on the ears... Not hearing any of that picked up here with your setup.
Ok..not a Mega 65 question...but I have to ask since it is a Commodore question: Have you ever heard of The Spartan by Mimic Systems? It was an Apple II hardware emulator for the C64. Not sure how I never came across that back in the day (and just found out about it recently)...would love to hear if you ever came across one? It would be really cool if you found one and could do a video on it! Not sure there are working ones anywhere out there anymore! Anyway, love your content! Thanks for entertaining me during a bit of a dark time right now....Warmest Regards
I think this is a great project and it looks like they have done a LOT to get this whole thing where it has to be. It is interesting the comparison of the MEGA64 and the X16. The goals, I think are a bit different but both achieve something quite fantastic. The MEGA65 looks like, because it is FPGA based, it have any of its rough edges smoothed out over time. The benefit with the modern tech here is that you don't have to open up the case and replace ROMs to get the enhancements, they can be written to the FPGA. I totally understand the comment about the personality of the computer. I think that will become more apparent over time. As for me, I am not sure when I will get around to adding this to my collection of electronic joy. I have a number of things I haven't really dug into yet, cuz reasons. I also am well aware that the design of this machine is directly derived from the C65, but if I am honest, I am not really a fan of the drive on the side as it is presented. I would almost prefer a design where there isn't a drive at all and it is just wedge with an external drive... but then there is the whole distribution of software and the potential that surrounds it because of the drive. Tho, for the same reasons I don't buy 15" laptops with the number pad, I would have a hard time using this particular machine for prolong periods of time. Regardless of any of my misgivings, I think this is absolutely fantastic! They have done a spectacular job and I am hoping for incredible success. If only I could get just the motherboard and keyboard, hmmm.... Thanks again, so much for these videos. I truly enjoyed it!
Glad you liked this! For now I see the X16 as better if you want to learn about how real chips and computers work (aside from the video chip which is FPGA). Whereas the 65 is better if you want a powerhouse to “just run things” and replicate multiple systems, without necessarily knowing how they run. So yes I’d agree they are different markets and not really competing.
That is an extremely promising machine. With a few more cores I might actually be tempted. Such as the Sharp X6800 series, The Sinclair QL (SuperBASIC was quite cool), The SAM Coupe, The BBC Master, The Acorn Archimedes and RISC PC, The Amstrad PCW, The Apple II GS, the Jupiter Ace, , The Memotech MX512 and maybe the IBM PC 5150. How would it fare as a word processor and productivity machine? Certainly, the keyboard is professional enough. I suppose it would support a printer of some sort. Also, does it actually network? A fantastic review, Perifractic. As always very committed to your work. Great job! Those double SID chips require some serious research. If it's FPGA could they make it Quad SID chips?
I programmed on my C128 when I was young and I still have the disks. Will there be a C128 core and am I able to connect vintage floppy disk drives to the Mega 65?
What this machine really needs is someone in a gray jacket and red shirt...Jim Butterfield style....to give us a nice VHS tape presentation of the machine. That user guide is important. You'll need that. Don't throw it away. We need the teardown too. Complete with comments about concert pianos.
Love the length of the video and going over the multi core support. I'm happy with mine so far, having a real kb/case/floppy as if the actual C65 had been released is part of the big appeal just like having a real C64 or amiga, someone fortunate enough to have scored a pre-production 64dx may not be interested in this. I like the fact you can do other cores but for me having the native + 64 mode is where it's at, I think the compatibility will increase over time though so more native 64 games will work
2:08 - Wow , not cheap to ship a chip to chip dippers who are no sheep 6:21 - Wow, built-in freeze 9:25 - Wow, smooth dots 11:25 - Wow, rasters CLUT and RRB, very impressive 13:05 - Wow, Parallax scroll , Mode7 15:07 - Wow, Blaster 15:47 - WOW!!! Pew Pew Doodle ... I love the design of it 17:52 - That's what she said 19:20 - Wow, Easter egg :) Btw, do not type: GO 69 20:51 - Wow, what a smooth transition 25:25 - That's what she said 27:40 - Wow, great to hear the plastic will improve 30:38 - Wow, very cool 45:00 - Wow, great conclusion and deep thoughts Fantastic review.
This kind of feels like to the C64 what the Next is to the ZX Spectrum. Out of interest, do you know the size of the user base? I'm wondering how many of these there will be in existence and how active the development scene will be. Oh, and great video btw, as always.
Currently there are 500 units out there - 100 devkits and 400 in the first production batch, not counting users of the emulator or users using the core with a Nexys A7 development board. A second batch was supposed to be an additional 1,000 but supply chain issues have cut it down to 400 (all preordered in October 2021) expected before Christmas, with the remaining preorders pushed back into a third batch expected in 2023.
Thank you so much for this video. I was strongly considering a Mega65 after your previous video; but today you sealed the deal (although my new PC build is going to have to suffer some budget cutbacks to fund the purchase).
A while back you put out a video asking whether it is time to save the original hardware some wear and tear, and use modern equivalents. That video resonated with me, because whilst there is something special about using original hardware, there is also an element of wanting to make sure it lasts for as long as possible. Getting it out for use would become a rather special occasion. Nothing available however, really did the job well enough. The emulation platforms do a remarkable job, but it still is never quite right.
The technical wonder that is FPGA has opened so many doors over the past few years. Sure, things need more work, but the foundational hardware is there to really use a modern hardware setup. And significantly, all in a single cased unit.
As a child I never had any of the Sinclair equipment (it was sometimes a lonely existence having a C64 surrounded by 48k and +2 kids), and whilst I wouldn't have swapped my C64 for any of the Sinclair releases, I've always had a bit of a soft spot for them. When there are working Speccy cores, I'd definitely have them in my regular rotation. Perhaps somebody will be able to create cores for the BBC Micro, and the Acorn Electron for some classroom nostalgia...
The Mega65 offers what I want from a retro computer now. Something I can have setup on my desk, along with my work computers and games consoles that allows me to enjoy my childhood, without a load of fuss. And who knows, I first learned to program on a C64; maybe the game I'm about to start work on can sprout a retro side project version. Maybe I could finally write my first real C64 game, with an enhanced Mega65 version. If I can find the time to resurrect what little assembly ability I have.
Anyhow, thank you (and all the Fractics) for the hard work you all put in. You never fail to hit me square in the nostalgia feels. Much love from back in Ole' Blighty.
I love this kind of perspective. Firstly I'm glad you feel that way about the vids. But also the machine. It makes me appreciate it all the more to see it through the eyes of someone looking for a modern way to replicate the physical hardware feel of the real things, without wearing them out and dealing with the maintenance. I agree, this is currently the best option we have that comes in a truly retro shell. BTW the Speccy core is now available, as should pop up in a correction to this video. I hope you can get hold of a MEGA 65 and enjoy it! Thanks for commenting.
It’s always interesting to read what I assume is a British perspective. I know the Spectrum was popular over there but wasn’t the UK one of Commodore’s biggest market?
Here in Australia, the C64 was hands down the most popular home computer of the 80s, followed by the Apple IIe / IIc. The only way I knew the Spectrum existed was because many of the C64 game boxes showed the screenshots on the back of the different platforms. I remember being confused why they made games for a computer no one had (I didn’t realise it was a British phenomenon until years later). To this day I’ve never seen a Spectrum (any model) in the flesh. Which is funny because I now have a Sinclair QL in my collection - a computer even the English turned their noses up at.
Thanks for watching! Considering the cost of FPGAs (over $200 each) not to mention the mechanical keyboard & floppy drive, & all the machine can do, do you agree with my conclusions and review score?
"Considering 1 of the 2 FPGAs costs $380 alone"
An elevated price due to the chip shortage. The two FPGAs used are out of stock with long lead times at both Mouser and Digikey. Octopart shows that the few places that have them are charging as much as double the normal price. Commander X16 apparently isn't as greatly affected since it was, by luck, designed to use more common, less exotic chips which I assume avoid the chip shortage? I'd like to see a tabular comparison of the Commander X16 versus MEGA65 - graphics, sound, benchmarks, etc.
Some bug fixes to be done. I guess it's worth it to those who really want it. For me I would LOVE a replica Atari Falcon. One day I hope.
You could have played the Red Dwarf theme!!!
Home computers were very cut down to fit a price but were not cheap. I think this is worth the money if you look at it as a boosted 1980's home computer. Obviously expensive compared to an old PC.
I agree 4/5 is fair, possibly even generous in the present state but the potential is certainly there as the platform grows and matures.
My impression is that the price MEGA paid for the FPGAs (at least for the first batch) is closer to $200 than to $400 because their manufacturing/distribution partner Trenz is a large Xilinx customer and is being very generous because of the non-profit status and uniqueness of the project.
I'm very satisfied with mine, but I do feel like I have to warn people that it's very much a work in progress and you're buying into an ongoing project, not a finished product. The pretty box and printed manual can give some people the wrong impression in that regard, though they also really add to the "Christmas 1982" feeling/experience when you get one. The MEGA team worked hard for that.
Compared to the plain blue screen that faced me when I first received my C-64 40 years ago (+ 2 weeks), this would have blown my mind with the amount of things that can be done just "in the box". Great overview!
Dang, RR's voice is so relaxing and calm, he's like the Bob Ross of retro computing. Ladies be like, "Oh I am totally subscribed." Nice work mate! Love your show!
It’s just a happy little accident 🎨
The Bob Ross of Retro. Brilliant
The only benefit to smoking 40 Marlboro a day! 🚬
My wife too. Lock your doors fellas.
Damn, your right ! Bob Ross of retro ❤
I really love how FPGAs have been adopted for bringing cool retro style things to life. Not in the budget to get one of these for the moment but some day perhaps. Thanks for all the fun and high quality videos you always put out there.
Yeah, great stuff. Getting cheaper and more and more attractive for hobbyists. Take $100 and you are in the game (see the F4PGA open source toolchain with the suggested architectures, if you or others are interested. BTW just a suggestion, there are a plethora of possibly "victims" on the market).
But the note on the text card ( 1:59 ) is not true. If you are generous, you may say that the routing is similar to that of an ASIC or Standard IC (but that is not true, since with an FPGA works via nets and predefined units). In any case, the assertion regarding the SID Soundchip is questionable (meaning wrong), since FPGAs only have analog components on board in (very very very and expensive) special cases, which would contradict the role as a field programmable gate(!) array. Under no circumstances are these identical or similar with the analog circuit hardware that is integrated into a SID chip.
Conclusion: Doesn't matter/Who cares?:) The emulation can finally be just as good or indistinguishable from the original. That is even the goal of an emulation.
Thanks for the explosion comedy and of course the review!
And thanks for the explosive donation - every bit helps us keep going! Apologies for the kaboom!
I have to admit, I'm super impressed at what they pulled off here. My one and only minor regret is it not being able to wear the Commodore badge. I wish the owners of that would licence it more. I don't think I'll be buying this though - I can't make my vintage computing problem worse by expanding into retrotech. But I'm glad these excellent two videos give me a really good taste of the thing.
Looks incredible! Great video too, it's such a chill vibe watching your channel and it always feels really cosy haha thank you
Thank you so much!!
Thanks and big applause! Normally I can hardly stand watching more than some 2 minutes of videos of this type, you know, with somebody talking and presenting stuff for half an hour or more.
But you with your real pleasant voice, technical solid background in combination with this interesting topic: got me, I watched the whole thing, liked it and subscribed. And now I'm thinking of ways on how to convince my wife that buying a MEGA 65 is a great idea :)
Thank you for your kind words! Means a lot 👍🕹️
Funny thing, the case is sinking on my original C64 too! It's authenticity thing :)
02:14 - can you explain that FPGA price calc please?
Well there's not much to explain. One of the chips costs 380AUD when it's in stock. www.digikey.com.au/en/products/detail/amd-xilinx/XC7A200T-1FBG484C/3925796
@@RetroRecipes that's $380 in AUD not USD. Switch the currency on that page to USD and it's about $250. I thought that price seemed high but assumed it was supply chain issues driving the price up since the last time I'd looked.
@@KithKanan64 Hey you're right! I'll add a correction.
Commodore had the weirdest R&D and marketing schemes. The Mega65 is something that would’ve been a weird one next to the Amiga and ST… much like the 128 was a very daft marketing strategy. The MEGA65 would’ve been great in 1984/1985 but it was planned for 88/89 (oh I see 91.. pffff) right? And when it would’ve been cheaper than the ST it would’ve stand a chance.
But the Mega65 team did awesome with that handbook! A lovely retro spiral bound book… goosebumps!
Honestly, it's beautiful. I mean, we often complain that today's world, technology is focused around money, greed etc. but projects like this Mega 65 show that there are still some passionate human beings who are able to create fantastic, truly unique projects. To me, this is not a computer project anymore, it's more like pure (tech) art :)
I love the feeling of it. It feels like it teleported from some parallel world, when Amiga never appeared, but instead Mega65 was the next release after C64 :)
Peri, while watching you experience the M65 I felt I was looking in the mirror (and liked what I saw for a change). I had a very similar rush of nostalgia and real joy experiencing the machine. But I also deeply felt your concluding frustrations over what a typical user might try to do (like, you know, load a physical disk in the disk drive). I think I spent most of my couple of days simply loading software to get it to run. Once done, it was a game of (blissful) whack-a-mole seeing what worked and what didn't and trying to learn the new user flow. After going through most of the demos and software I ultimately felt like I was ready to wait a bit. And if that meant coming back in 6 months or even a year, I was comfortable with that. I'd waited this long, what was another year? If I was a programmer I think I'd be trying to create for this machine if I had the time and skill. As a user, I hope someone out there (Shallan? Vogt? Sanderson? Someone else?) creates that "killer app" we all are proud to say, "Yep! I was here first. I knew it all along. What took you so long?" And it leaves everyone else jealous of our being early-adopters. But even if that never happens, I'm so so happy to have seen this project come this far. And to be able to call myself a believer, and fan.
Hi mate, I’m glad you got the nostalgic kick out of this that I hoped for viewers. It will be fun watching where this machine goes. And I will of course revisit and share with the community as always 🙌
I love the design of the shell. Putting the floppy disk drive on the right side reminds me the Amstrad CPC 664 and Lord Sugar's "all in one" concept. The FPGA inside makes it extremely flexible, as well. Great video Chris, as always.
Is it HD or DD disks ?
I have 10 HD disks in my bookshelf but i have to idea where to get DD disks anymore.
Amiga was DD if i remember correctly. HD didn't work.
@@SirGeldi the disk drive is new old stock, so I guess it is HD
@@SirGeldi the drive is HD but currently the core/ROM support DD only. Users have reported success with HD disks as long as you cover the HD hole with opaque tape (the difference between the magnetic properties of DD and HD 3.5" is much less than between DD and HD 5.25"). Work was started on HD support with a custom format that may support around 3MB on a standard 1.44MB HD floppy, but then the first batch of machines were released and the chip shortage got worse so the team has had other priorities dealing with unforeseen issues and trying to get the next batches out. I'm looking forward to it when they have a chance to get back to it.
Such an interesting mix of old and new technology! That ringed manual does remind me of using the C64 one as a kid.
@17:22 "Your Mega65 will self-destruct in 5 seconds." I wasn't expecting anything after that reference to Mission Impossible so I chose that moment to turn away to have a bite of chocolate, and then jumped slightly out of my seat at the noise of the explosion!
Sorry!
@@RetroRecipes Don't worry, it was funny :)
To get a directory listing, you oughtta try DIRECTORY or CATALOG command. At least one of those were in Basic 7.0 on the C-128, so should be available on this more advanced version of BASIC.
I'm a first batch owner. I love it. I'm always carving out time to fiddle with it. I can't wait for more software!
The sheer level of dedication and passion behind this project leaves me speechless!
It’s pretty miraculous all round honestly!
@@RetroRecipes are you a time traveler?
Thiesi 19 minutes ago
Retro Recipes 25 minutes ago It’s pretty miraculous all round honestly!
how did you answer the question 6 minutes before he answered
@@robchissy It looks completely normal here. Maybe just refresh?
@@robchissy I'm not allowed to tell you that
Fully agree. But mostly only interesting for really fans of the C64. For those of us that only remember it from our youth and never had a C64, the price seems too high when you think you can play most game titles on a Pi without a problem.
If I had one of these I would want to see what I could do with the updated basic and improved sprite handling! The question for me is which would I want more, this or the Commanderx16?! Ugh!!!! Too much cool stuff!!! Thanks for the review!
What an incredible retro-computer is this MEGA 65.
I wish I had enough room for a CRT monitor so I could learn and play with this gem like with my Amiga 500 back then :)
If you have a monitor I am sure you could plug this into it.
@@wayland7150 native outputs are VGA and "Digital Video" (unlicensed/uncertified HDMI), though because the main core's output resolutions are 720x480@60 Hz or 720x576@50 Hz, compatibility with flat panel VGA and DVI/HDMI monitors can sometimes be iffy as not all of them support those EDTV (progressive scan SD) resolutions.
@@KithKanan64 what
@@Pseudoplasmagore not all monitors like the MEGA65. It outputs some weird video modes that would be fine on old CRT monitors but aren't supported by all flat panel monitors/TVs. Some monitors I've tried only work in the 50hz mode or the 60hz mode but not both.
Great video and review! Thank you for taking enough time to really see what this machine is and can be. In the end you really got it right!
Thank you 🙏
Enjoyed your review and the time you took to share your MEGA65 journey :) Some things I can share. Right now, to my ears, the 8580 SID sounds better than the 6581 SID (this will probably improve over time). Also, the background story on the intro-disk, we were thinking it would be a nice way to showcase what the community had created for the year. So yes, many of us are cutting our teeth with the new system, learning the ropes, and I'm looking forward to seeing the 1st gen coders get more and more ambitious over time :) We're also hoping the intro disks will be an annual thing, to showcase the community's creations each year :)
That’s some great insight into the decisions, thanks! I can see that the demo programs are more about showcasing the cool community than the machine’s ultimate capabilities. Keep up the great work.
Once again, superb work here Mr Fractic! A fully entertaining, educating and fair review of the Mega65...only a true artist integrates an unexpected falling Duracell battery into the final cut😄Loved it. Also, many thanks for the mention, yes the Raster Rewrite Buffer sprite demo and Blaster are a couple of my creations for the machine. I hope others are inspired to check out the Mega65 in more detail - there is an no-cost emulator (xemu), so people can "dip their toe" in Mega65 water first.
Great work and thank you again.
Thank you for your kind words! Means a lot 👍🕹️ And keep up the great work.
Man, this computer comes with a detailed handbook and the new laptop I bought for my parents didn't even have a full spec sheet. Only a "manual" with some rudimentary information.
Since this is after, they should implement a GO 128 mode.
It's cool that it can achieve similar graphics to the Amiga but has the great C64 sound.
I’m endlessly fascinated by the fact that many Brits seemed to call the C128 the Commodore “one two eight”, whereas here in Canada I’m used to hearing it called the Commodore “one twenty-eight”.
The direct translation of common way we say it in Finland would be "hundred two eight" ;p Trust me, in Finnish it rolls off ones tongue better than the ones you mentioned would ;)
Also the way we pronounce is not using the "proper" ("book-language" or "literal") spelling of the Finnish words for two and eight.
Just thought if you're fascinated by that, you might also enjoy this technically not very useful tidbit of knowledge ;)
@@robsku1 That is interesting, thank for sharing that! :)
As an aside, are infrared saunas becoming popular in Finland? I've tried both, and I *vastly* prefer infrared saunas.
Great review, my friend! I really was looking forward to this episode. I also ported my renderer into BASIC 10. Very advanced Commodore BASIC dialect and a joy to program! Thank you for your dedication and effort you put into this video. Its a great machine!
Glad it was helpful! You ported your wireframe renderer to v10? Nice!
FWIW, the ESC-T/ESC-B window stuff also works on the C128's native mode. Lots of powerful ESC sequences on that. ESC-@ to clear to end of screen, ESC-A to activate insert mode, ESC-C to get back out of it . . .
Fun and fair review! Thanks, Perifractic.
Grundig VS300 series VCRs (built around '85-'86) default to 3 : 7 (three, blank, colon, 7, blank). The internal state machine fixes this to 38:00 the next minute. Two hours later it rolls from 39:59 over to 30:00. It then counts normally up until it hits 39:59 again. It never goes back to any sane time (unless you set the clock, that is).
Very happy to see your nostalgia way up high like that! You make me smile when you are having retro fun, probably cause Im the same geeky way. Thanks for the video my friend showing off what the Mega65 can do. At that price it's not for me, but I can see where the love and joy comes for those that purchase one. Well done :)
Glad you enjoyed it!
I think the aspect ratio was adjusted because it thinks its on a wide screen monitor since most of us no longer have the CRTs anymore. But I will bet there is an option for that aspect ratio if you go back to that initial setup screen.
The text windowing via Esc codes has been there since the plus/4 and C128-pretty handy if you want to have a scrolling or otherwise mutable output window in a BASIC program without disturbing the rest of the screen.
Somehow I never knew that!
This system needs a warning sticker. It would cause sleep deprivation and skipped meals in my case. Wow, can't get over what is possible for a next gen C64.
17:31 reminds me of my favorite show of all time, BBC's Life on Mars!
I'm so tempted to get a Mega65. Super cool machine. Thanks for the video Perifractic!
Jupiter lander was the first game I got for my c64. I think it was originally released for the vic 20, which may explain the joystick port issue.
It's got the instant usability that the 1980's home computers had with ROM cartridges. It's got the ability to change personalities into other 80's and 90's microcomputers. I'd say it's pretty good but there are other new 80's machines that do this sort of thing too. If you were a whizz on those and want to use those skills again then having an 80's machine you know only 40 times faster is very cool.
Nice video! That "restore" key behaviour that you observed appears to be true to original hardware. The "restore" key on an original VIC-20 or C64 or C128 will interrupt the CPU with a Non Maskable Interrupt (NMI) subroutine. I presume they replicated this on the Mega65. Some games can recover from an NMI. However, timing critical sound, video and disk routines will typically glitch out if not crash out.
Woohaa! Thanks for featuring my game! Score or Die :D It was originally made for some shallans challenge if i remember correctly :D And it is not Basic game.
I used TRSE, so it is dialect of pascal. I never used pascal before this so it took whopping 8 hours to make it happen.
btw, i actually care for hardware so in game menu Mega65 is running only 3.5MHz but for some reason gameloop runs full speed 40MHz ;)
Nice work!!
My Mom was a schoolteacher so my early childhood computing was mostly done on her classroom's luggable Apple IIc. When we got our own home computer it was an Apple IIGS. It was backward compatible and had all of the capabilities of the Apple II with the added graphics and sound enhancements of the IIGS on 16-bit IIGS exclusive software. The MEGA 65 feels like if the C64 were to have had a IIGS-like successor.
Funny I said the same in part 1
@@RetroRecipes and here I was thinking I had an original thought 😊
WOW! What a great looking machine. Aesthetically it looks awesome and the functionality looks out of this world. Where can I get me one of those beauties! Perifractic you are one lucky man indeed, you get to try out some amazing tech and do some wonderful things along the way. Thank you for showing us these remarkable machines 😊
Thank you! Link in description 👍🕹️
I'm curious if it'll be possible to run a Commander X16 core with the Mega 65? That would be interesting, I think.
Please remember that C64s were originally designed for NTSC even though they were popular longer in PAL regions. C65 original specs are also based on the NTSC standard with references to YIQ video encoding (PAL uses YUV).
Correct but that doesn’t change the fact that most games and demos were made in PAL. That’s just the way it was.
Yes, hence the crappy low percentage of screen use. If it was designed as PAL machine, it would have had either more lines of text, or more lines per character. With PAL you could show 256 progressive scanlines with ease, so that means 32 lines of the 8 pixel font, or 25 lines with 10 vertical pixels per character for a better readable font. We had a machine with 80 characters x 24 lines of 6x10 pixels. It had way smaller borders. But weird enough the Speccy was even worse with 32x24 characters of 8x8 pixels, and it was designed for PAL from start.
I showered my desk in coffee. Twice. The explosions made me jump 😂
haha oops sorry!
@RR Thank you for bringing us along with you on this journey down a branch of Commodore tech that might have been. Impressive for the time when it should have been realized. Would love to have owned one in ‘87, but I had an Atari 1200XL. Found a wonderland of software for it when my parents took me to Singapore and Hong Kong in ‘86 when I was nearly 16.
Given how you were talking about case molding, I'm assuming you're spearheading the case design for the Commander X16 for when it reaches its smaller form factor. Probably a good experience to check out the pros & cons of this project as the X16 is still in development.
Personally, I think the multicore functionality makes its heftier price more reasonable. I went the MiSTer FPGA route because I wanted to cull my desire to buy every system under the sun. Though I can't imagine not having a real C64.
Good points. I have stepped back from the X16 project, probably permanently. But I will be getting a review unit from the first public batch.
I started on the ZX81 and then the Amiga 500, (edit) How does the C65 stand up against the Amiga 500? some of those games look very colourful compared to some Amiga games using only 128 to 256 colours.
I've never used a C64 so I'm confused where this computer C65 fits in on the timeline planned release?
Watch part 1 😉
1:20 The Sid chip sounds awesome through my Wharfedale speakers.
first off, thanks for the great review. a difficult project to demo, not for the casual person getting into the c64 (a-la the fpga emu's and mister @$200) but clearly shows dedication and passion by the team. i'll keep an eye on it for the retro perspective and touchy-feely of actually running "original" tin. love it.
It looks absolutely fine.. but that price point really kills it off for me. I totally understand WHY it costs so much, but that leads to a more existential issue. What's the point and who is the audience? A fun, nostalgia-inducing case with a floppy disc interface. That's it really. There are cheaper ways to go FGPA emulation, with a lot more flexibility. With such limited availability, is there ever really going to be software support? One text adventure does not get me excited. I'm afraid it's an expensive toy as things stand
The former C64 whizz kids have done economically well and are generally prosperous people. This audience will like the machines's features and is also able to afford it. I do think that the price of the Mega65 is its worst enemy, but on the other hand, they have already done wonders to get it available at this price.
32:00 that glass of soda near the Mega65 makes me so nervous for it.
Thanks for another video about it, I must say the demo makers did a great job featuring all the hardware functions, that kind of stuff was often missing at platform launches bitd as I don't think many understood what the Amiga was when they first showed it off.
I think it's worth the price if you got the money since it does many things like COREs, FPGAs are great but it's bit like the RAM situation in the late 70s to 80s of cost and supply limitations. Although vendors might want to consider layaway options as even a 4-month division can help sell units.
It's a very cool machine, I really like the dual SID aspect, often forgotten how long it took to get stereo gaming as everything 8-bit tends to be mono sound only. Also those native graphic modes look sweet, Amiga grade. :D These intermediate models do have appeal but I think we appreciate them more now than we did before. :)
Have you tried a MiSTer FPGA before/yet? It has a zillion cores for retro consoles/handhelds, 8-bit/16-bit/16-32-bit computers including the ZX Spectrum NEXT, and hundreds of arcade board cores. Included are the Amiga, Atari ST, C64, etc. I wonder if the Mega 65 core could be ported to the MiSTer?
Tastes differ but for me I just don't find it nostalgic unless it's in a retro case/keyboard
@@RetroRecipes The MiSTer Project is community driven rather than company / product-driven and as a result, there are lots of case options that range from self-done 3D-printed designs (including a wedge computer case), to mass-produced metal (Mr. Addons for example), to console-ization (MiSTer Multisystem), to mini-ITX, to JAMMA arcade machine integration. There is even a third-party board for the MiSTer to fit it into an Amiga 500 case (MiSTress) or a repro Amiga case. I've seen someone put it inside of an Atari ST case as well. The variety mostly comes from the DIY folks... although there are a number of MiSTer oriented retailers who offer several pre-configured bundles.
I myself prefer the MiSTer Multisystem but I do also have a more traditional "sandwich" setup as well. I'm guessing you have no idea what I'm talking about... but if you are into retro hardware preservation, the MiSTer Project is where its at. That Raspberry Pi-sized, Terasic DE10 Nano board that the MiSTer is based off can do so much stuff. I don't have a solid number to give you, but my best guess is that there are around 600 cores... with a significant chunk of those being arcade board cores. If you can spare the time, check out the list of hardware the MiSTer has cores for. It is kind of mind blowing. For whatever reason, a lot of the arcade cores that are available aren't listed on their wiki... I think because there are so many and they come out all the time, that it is hard to keep up with them all. Doing it an FPGA means parallel execution and input and output latency that matches the original hardware. It's like magic. :)
@@lsdowdle That’s definitely impressive. And don’t get me wrong, I’m not knocking it or people who love it. More power to ya!
@@RetroRecipes You could always hook a Mister to a Keyrah and an original Commodore keyboard in a breadbin or 64C case.
Wow good video. I love the way it looks and all its features. Back in the day had a good old VIC-20 then C-64 then C128 then lol Amiga A500 Batman pack which sold in UK. Just think what could of done with this bit of kit way back then hmmmmm the mind boggles. Great video be nice to see the things to appear for it.😄
Oh I miss using 3.5 floppies. So many memories on various machines….pure nostalgia
I found it pretty nostalgic when I started messing around with old computers, too... I've really enjoyed going back to using floppy media on these old machines.
I would rather have seen it on the side, with a numpad instead of a floppy-bump. Maybe they do a second model, the MEGA130 in C128 shape.
I'd really like one to be able to play my childhood memories. Even knowing the cost of manufacter it's just waay to expensive to feel comfortable buying one. Right now they are also in the early adopter phase so if they break it might be a hassle getting it fixed or even worse having to wait for a replacement. But I am really rooting for Mega65. It's great to see such a high quality product come along aside the recent mini remakes console makers have done. You can actually use all the functionality of this machine.
Hi, I wanted to know something. have you tried to load the initial program of the demos and games from the virtual drive? I have a problem with it, the intro with program titles and demos don't load from it! It is loaded correctly only from the main drive!
A score of 4 is just about right IMHO. I only wish it had come out with games that would show the world what this baby can really do. Sound wise, it's very impressive.
Maybe the included games are to teach BASIC programming, instead of having to type them in from the manual?
Greetings and a big thank you for this Video from Germany 👋
Another great video and amazing machine. There is indeed some nostalgia to sitting down and taking time to....RTFM :)
Hi Peri, what is this computer in the background over your left shoulder with the bread bin on top? Reminds me on my early years. 🤔
BBC Micro Model B!
Wow great computer. Many of us still pounder the question "What if Commodore Computers was still in business?"
Maybe they would be ahead of the pack as they were in the 1980's but with Jack Tramiel gone who knows that future.
Thanks again Retro recipes & perifractic
This project was one of the reason why they are not anymore. To much money waste on retro projects than R&D of the future. Besides der PC venture.
Would have made no difference, the PC was unstoppable by then. It did everything Commodore did, but better, with multiple manufacturers innovating and developing new add-on cards and standards to expand its capabilities. No one company could compete against it and the PC platform swept away all competing micros as it rose to dominance. Only Apple managed to survive by carving out a niche in DTP and music production markets and then thrived by turning towards building wildly successful, easy-to-use mobile devices.
@@little_fluffy_clouds You said it, Apple did survived. With more focus it could've been possible to survive. Direct competition against PCs, I agree, would have been impossible.
But, well they are history now.
New nostalgia...sums it up for me - great honest review peri.
I've seen this before. It looks VERY cool. Would love to get my hands on one. But for the price I think I'll wait for a little more refinement. I hope that's not a bad choice on my part.
Did you write the music for the c65 boot screen as it sounds like it has your touch 🙂
Ha no but maybe that's why I like it
Such a great little unit! I wonder if there are any music trackers (like Amiga's Octamed) for the M65, hopefully we'll get to see you find and review one in a future vid!
A very fair score Perifractic. I would have been tempted to give it 4.5 as I think the audio is fantastic. However, 4 is a very fair score for the whole system.
Nice review, it's a very cool project. Kind of a Commodore equivalent to the Spectrum Next project, just a bit faster and with a disk drive built in.
Indeed!
The built in disk drive is actually a very practical touch. On a PC the disk is far too small capacity and slow but on this machine it's to scale. If my home computer had come with a floppy drive back in 1983 it would have been so much better.
Fascinating stuff.
Surprised there was no sound in the Game Boy core, but cool to see that running. Definitely hope there will be more cores available (maybe even the C-One cores could be ported across?)
Makes me want a MEGA 65 even more having seen this .
I added a correction that they said there should be sound and it may have been an issue with my video capture set up. Still a bit strange but definitely possible. I hope you can get hold of one in the future! Let me know if that GameBoy sound works ;-)
@@RetroRecipes I've played the GB core on mine and the sound is fine. I'm piping sound via HDMI and splitting off the sound to bookshelf speakers.
Very nice video indeed, so nostalgic, so beautifully made! Congratulations 👏👏👏
Thank you 🙏
I recently got a Commodore CRT and don't really like to use it because the high pitched noise from the deflectoin coils is much louder than I remembered, hard to bear, argh! Now I'm using the HDMI converter again with worse image, but much nicer on the ears...
Not hearing any of that picked up here with your setup.
This Sony doesn’t emit that. It’s usually actually a problem with the CRT and can be corrected.
Ok..not a Mega 65 question...but I have to ask since it is a Commodore question: Have you ever heard of The Spartan by Mimic Systems? It was an Apple II hardware emulator for the C64. Not sure how I never came across that back in the day (and just found out about it recently)...would love to hear if you ever came across one? It would be really cool if you found one and could do a video on it! Not sure there are working ones anywhere out there anymore! Anyway, love your content! Thanks for entertaining me during a bit of a dark time right now....Warmest Regards
You’re welcome sir. And no I haven’t heard of that but I’ll add it to the admittedly long list 👍🕹️
I think this is a great project and it looks like they have done a LOT to get this whole thing where it has to be. It is interesting the comparison of the MEGA64 and the X16. The goals, I think are a bit different but both achieve something quite fantastic. The MEGA65 looks like, because it is FPGA based, it have any of its rough edges smoothed out over time. The benefit with the modern tech here is that you don't have to open up the case and replace ROMs to get the enhancements, they can be written to the FPGA. I totally understand the comment about the personality of the computer. I think that will become more apparent over time.
As for me, I am not sure when I will get around to adding this to my collection of electronic joy. I have a number of things I haven't really dug into yet, cuz reasons. I also am well aware that the design of this machine is directly derived from the C65, but if I am honest, I am not really a fan of the drive on the side as it is presented. I would almost prefer a design where there isn't a drive at all and it is just wedge with an external drive... but then there is the whole distribution of software and the potential that surrounds it because of the drive. Tho, for the same reasons I don't buy 15" laptops with the number pad, I would have a hard time using this particular machine for prolong periods of time.
Regardless of any of my misgivings, I think this is absolutely fantastic! They have done a spectacular job and I am hoping for incredible success. If only I could get just the motherboard and keyboard, hmmm....
Thanks again, so much for these videos. I truly enjoyed it!
Glad you liked this! For now I see the X16 as better if you want to learn about how real chips and computers work (aside from the video chip which is FPGA). Whereas the 65 is better if you want a powerhouse to “just run things” and replicate multiple systems, without necessarily knowing how they run. So yes I’d agree they are different markets and not really competing.
That is an extremely promising machine. With a few more cores I might actually be tempted.
Such as the Sharp X6800 series, The Sinclair QL (SuperBASIC was quite cool), The SAM Coupe, The BBC Master, The Acorn Archimedes and RISC PC, The Amstrad PCW, The Apple II GS, the Jupiter Ace, , The Memotech MX512 and maybe the IBM PC 5150.
How would it fare as a word processor and productivity machine? Certainly, the keyboard is professional enough. I suppose it would support a printer of some sort. Also, does it actually network?
A fantastic review, Perifractic. As always very committed to your work. Great job!
Those double SID chips require some serious research. If it's FPGA could they make it Quad SID chips?
It is quad SID as per my pop up correction that should be displayed when I say dual
May as well give it all of them from the era if possible. Each core widens it's appeal, how about CoCo3 and Dragon 64.
@@RetroRecipes Oh. That is very cool. We should see some very interesting Audio created on that platform.
Can anyone share a link to the joystick with the glowing buttons in the video, please? Is it a real product or something modded?
It’s called the UNI-THOR and is real
@@RetroRecipes thanks!
I programmed on my C128 when I was young and I still have the disks.
Will there be a C128 core and am I able to connect vintage floppy disk drives to the Mega 65?
Someone is porting the Mister 128 Core. And yes you can hook up floppy drives. You have to take this machine as a "First Gen" product.
Loving the production values.
What this machine really needs is someone in a gray jacket and red shirt...Jim Butterfield style....to give us a nice VHS tape presentation of the machine. That user guide is important. You'll need that. Don't throw it away.
We need the teardown too. Complete with comments about concert pianos.
Teardown in part 1 😉
@@davedave9308 Lol if only…
Looks and sounds amazing and within some time it will get better, it leaves you in a day dream of future possibilities
The battery attacked you? Are you considering charging it with anything?
Assault and battery
Excellent Review, Brings back so many memories. Grats on your new toy.
Maybe put the information on a sticker on top of the disk drive a la the Amstrad CPC?
Great video again. Any network connectivity?
Thanks. Yes that’s coming soon.
How fast is the tape drive?
Love the length of the video and going over the multi core support. I'm happy with mine so far, having a real kb/case/floppy as if the actual C65 had been released is part of the big appeal just like having a real C64 or amiga, someone fortunate enough to have scored a pre-production 64dx may not be interested in this. I like the fact you can do other cores but for me having the native + 64 mode is where it's at, I think the compatibility will increase over time though so more native 64 games will work
That music on Jupiter Lander is actually the music from Moon Cresta!
What kind of joystick are you using in the video? I love it.
Could you use the fast load cartridge, that comes for the counter 64/128 on it
Are these still preorder? I need one!
The time is 32:25? I know the time zone is different in that part of the world but I didn't realize it was THAT far ahead. 🤣
Is this intended to be limited release? Or will it eventually be available through wider distribution, such as amazon etc?
Amazing video. Thank you for doing this
Since it's a 16 bit, any mention of an originial Mac core for it? Just wondering...
2:08 - Wow , not cheap to ship a chip to chip dippers who are no sheep
6:21 - Wow, built-in freeze
9:25 - Wow, smooth dots
11:25 - Wow, rasters CLUT and RRB, very impressive
13:05 - Wow, Parallax scroll , Mode7
15:07 - Wow, Blaster
15:47 - WOW!!! Pew Pew Doodle ... I love the design of it
17:52 - That's what she said
19:20 - Wow, Easter egg :) Btw, do not type: GO 69
20:51 - Wow, what a smooth transition
25:25 - That's what she said
27:40 - Wow, great to hear the plastic will improve
30:38 - Wow, very cool
45:00 - Wow, great conclusion and deep thoughts
Fantastic review.
Being a Commodore fan myself this is very interesting..... Keep up the good work 👍
This kind of feels like to the C64 what the Next is to the ZX Spectrum. Out of interest, do you know the size of the user base? I'm wondering how many of these there will be in existence and how active the development scene will be.
Oh, and great video btw, as always.
Currently there are 500 units out there - 100 devkits and 400 in the first production batch, not counting users of the emulator or users using the core with a Nexys A7 development board. A second batch was supposed to be an additional 1,000 but supply chain issues have cut it down to 400 (all preordered in October 2021) expected before Christmas, with the remaining preorders pushed back into a third batch expected in 2023.
@@KithKanan64 thank you for the in-depth information. 😊👍
17:30 About half an hour ago, I saw a video with a bang not nearly as loud as that one, but he warned those of us who use headphones.:o)
Sorry!