Absolutely. It was interesting following the development of graphics throughout the 90s, but what absolutely changed everything for me was the sound. I could not believe that I could hook up my pentium win95 machine to my hi-fi and play my CDs and my mp3 from there. What a time to be alive
Clearly remember that day back in 1996. After the upgrade launched Prince of Persia 2. Had been playing that game for quite a while but then there was human voice in the intro along with unbelievable good bgm . "In ancient Persia...". Almost fell off my chair....
I miss getting a disc drive but sound cards have evolved to sound just as good if not better on a tiny chip. Just look at all the portable DAC/Amp combos on the market, a fraction of the size
That card is looking like the holy grail of 90s sound cards. A single ISA slot used to do literally all the sounds (assuming no memory conflicts). Zero compromises and the ability to add MIDI is just the icing on an already delectable cake. I wonder how many of these OPL and AMD sound chips are still out there in the wild. Also, what an era of computing. Where sound cards were a legit thing to upgrade your setup with and some of them had RAM slots.
@@nicwilson89 It's probably a good investment. There are probably limited numbers of those chips available. It almost certainly won't be available in 5 or 10 years.
It's the holy grail of 1985-1995 sound cards, but the later-90s introduced environmental audio effects and advanced surround sound which were mind-blowing at the time.
Hearing Clint mix up two consecutive words in a line, and then instead of simply fixing it in post simply points it out & laughs over what he just said during editing, is a constant joy. "The Ultra-side Sound of Things" is right up there with "Hoddware Oddness".
@@DryPaperHammerBro Look up "LGR Oddware - Thermaltake PC Drive Bay". That's the one with the "Hodware Oddness" in it. Also "The KeyStik Clip-on Joystick for Keyboards: LGR Oddware" has the "constructions" instead of "instructions".
The AC97 Audio header is a nice touch. I remember back in the day adding a sound card to a pre-built system usually meant sacrificing the front panel ports.
@@AngelDemonn You should be using the hardware GS bank. The samples are more or less the same, Yucatan is just super bass heavy out of the box, as well as prone to clipping issues.
I own the original Orpheus card which I got for my 486 desktop system with the built in speakers and I was impressed by that card. Just seeing the Orpheus 2 in your video certainly got my attention. Especially with the beautiful design, the care and passion taken to design this thing is absolutely amazing! I love the passion the retro community has for making these amazing sound card options available.
Man, I had a "10,000 in 1" shareware games and one must fall 2097 was on there. Our Presario definitely only had a Soundblaster card of some sort and I am blown away about the difference with the gravis
I still have my GUS. ( in my display cabinet ) It was one of the best buys i have ever done. I have spend hours every day making music with programs like fasttracker.
So cool. I used to make S3M's and Impulse Tracker mods back in the day using my Gravis Ultrasound. What a gamechanger it was when I upgraded to it from my original Thunderboard.
I am always impressed with all the cool stuff being made like this, would have never imagined people would be making stuff like that now back in the day. The retro scene people are awesome.
My name came up in the purchase list for this just before the video came out. Cost a damn fortune after converting to Canadian dollars, but I'm stoked to get it for a future DOS build project I'm planning. Can't wait! In terms of what I'd add to a next-gen model, I'd say probably the AdLib Gold (just to complete the trifecta) and I'd love to see genuine Sound Blaster chips in it, though I'm sure that would be a tall order. Other than maybe the ability to swap out the headphone amplifiers for the truly nutbar among us, I can't think of much else.
I love the fact that in the audio sections on the card they didn't use normal electrolytic's and instead went for nichicon ufg Fine Gold audio grade electrolytic capacitors, really no expense spared AT ALL, the sound speaks for itself!
What we need is a PCI Express sound card that's compatible with the old MS-DOS sound card so that we can add DOS sound support with a "modern" computer running FreeDOS.
The problem you're going to run into though is that there's no PC DOS drivers for the pcie bus. So there's no way for your software to talk to your Hardware cuz you can't communicate on the bus.
The problem is that while PCI Express cards could respond to all the right I/O ports, PCI and PCI Express cannot do ISA compatible DMA like what DOS programs expect. There's nothing for PCI and PCI Express to do that with. When sound cards moved from the ISA bus to the PCI bus in the late 1990s, they either didn't bother with DOS games, or you had to load EMM386.EXE and run a special TSR in the background that intercepted the I/O to emulate a Sound Blaster for the DOS game, or you had to run the DOS game in a Windows 9x DOS box where Windows or a 3rd party driver would emulate it. There were some hardware level hacks too at the time. On some motherboards there was a special cable you had to connect to the card and the motherboard to carry the ISA DMA signals. On Intel boards, there was a hack called "Distributed DMA" which allowed the PCI card to fiddle with the motherboard DMA controller to fake ISA DMA which sometimes worked. But that hack didn't last very long. On a related note, you may have noticed that the disappearance of the standard floppy controller in the late 2000s coincided with a particular version of Intel motherboard chipsets where they completely dropped support for any kind of ISA DMA at all, because the standard floppy controller and floppy drive also used ISA DMA to operate.
so very cool that new cards are still out there. That being said my favorite card of all time is the awe 64 gold. I think it is because it was what I had back in the day.
This sound card is what I've always wanted for a retro pc setup. I hope one day we can get some of the old stock chips replaced with FPGAs. Also respect for playing Jazz 3D music.
I really enjoy watching old LGR videos and seeing how far Clint has taken his channel. The channel could compete with any cable or tv show. Best UA-camr.
They should make a V3 with an FPGA, these ASICs are getting harder to source and make up the majority of the cost. An FPGA card could have multiple soundcards flashed onto it and different combinations to use, all while taking up a much smaller footprint than a custom card that uses multiple ASICs. A prototype of this was pitched at VCF Midwest so it's an idea that has been around for a while now.
I think this is the most ideal solution. I wonder if that card that was being developed and shown at VCF Midwest would have seen the light of day if the chip shortage hadn't happened...
Somebody have to create the FPGA first. And then thre is the question - isn't it simpler to have it emulated on something like RPi. Or isn't it simpler to have it in DosBox. I just like it as is - the discrete sound card on real chips. On real device with real hard drive and real CRT.
@@rkurbatov no need to "create" a new FPGA - they are called "Field Programmable Gate Array" for a reason - simply put, you can "rewire" the transistors inside a FPGA any way you want so they can be anything you tell them to be. If you have the wiring diagram of the real chip and an FPGA that has enough transistors inside to rewire, you can recreate an EMU8k and a CT1749 for example ... or even a voodoo cards TMU and FBI. It's the closest you can get to the real chip and, if done right, indistinguishable in function - it beats "software emulation" like dosbox or some RPi thing. Only downside is that FPGAs cost money too, and the more capable they get, the more money they'll cost - so - it might not matter if you use FPGA or NOS/Salvaged original chips, you might end up with a mighty expensive clone card either way
oohhhhh man that card is dope maybe have to get one one day, I have plenty of isa sound cards to play with though. so glad that there is people that can build this stuff and keep the retro computers going strong :)
Huge fan of my original Orpheus and the MK8330, these guys do amazing work. I'm on the fence about this one - not sure the GUS support is worth the upgrade as I doubt I'll use it outside of novelty value. Still very cool that it exists!
I really miss my GUS, not sure what happened to it, but hands down my favorite sound card. It was the PnP Pro as I recall. It's replacement was the SB X-Fi Xtreme music with the full front panel. Almost as amazing. Now I run whatever my MB has 😢
oh. my. god. for years I've thought about that fish game, and could never figure out what it was called, when I randomly see it in an LRG video and get hit with a megaton blast of nostalgia and now know its name. odell down under.
I built my own 20 Mhz computer and added a simple soundcard. After those wonderful months I decided to step into Soundblaster mode. Never did anything really with midi because... For me it all started with a Pong computer, Atari 2600 (still have it) from there the C64 road to Amiga and now rely on pc with windows 10 almost 11. I had a blast time and love to see your passion still alive.
i remember One Must Fall. I had the shareware version on my 386 dx 25 i think. It was novel for me to play pc games with a game pad when i was older as we only had consoles to use growing up.
I just got this card a couple of weeks ago and I must say it is phenomenal! I installed it on my Pentium system with 98lite. There was some hassle on the windows side with resources, but that is not Orpheus fault. It is just the PnP and so much stuff there which require IO, IRQ and DMA and Windows likes to throw those around. I needed to configure PCMidi or IRQ3 too. Pure DOS should be much more easier.
Hmm... sounds promising. Let's see what it's made of 👍🎶🎵🎶 Oh. What a sweet multipurpose card it is. Thanks for the One Must Fall 2097 music test. The menu music is great. Actually it's been my ringtone for many, many years. 😃
I am one of those lucky ones that purchased a Ultrasound (Max!) back in the day, and I have also collected over the years a nice lot of ISA Soundblasters, so I will not need this, but it is beyond fantastic seeing there is still passionate people creating amazing things like this. It is expensive, but back then that Gravis was also a massive amount of money, at least here. One of my favorite pieces of hardware I have been so lucky to get, and even luckier to preserve (I wish I could go back in time and prevent myself from selling my 1st gen Vodoo1 card) From this video, I am jumping into the card stand STL head first. I have been for ages being a lazy ass about finding a nice way to have my collection of cards properly displayed, and this design is awesome. Cant wait to test it.
I think the integrated SCSI interface idea would add capabilities to a lot of systems out there. I only had IDE, parallel, and serial on my system growing up. Seeing interesting devices that utilized the standard filled me with envy for some reason....
I was admittedly zoning out a little bit while watching it, but that One Must Fall lightning and theme song immediately snapped my attention back. Love that game.
These are going to be in super limited supply, all of the new old stock chips required to make these are getting impossible to find. I am so glad I got ordered before this video went live. Just like the Goldlib.
The first thing I thought of on seeing it was wondering if it would be possible to replace the new old stock chips with some sort of FPGA replacement. The problem is that it would probably be very time consuming, and definitely expensive to make, though the likes of the MiSTer project and the Analogue clone consoles have shown it is possible in theory.
No matter how many of LGR"s videos on sound cards I watch, and I do love watching and learning about them, I always end up more confused then when I began and that's despite Clint's calm and easy to understand explanations. It just seems whenever I think I'm getting a grasp on it, it just gets more and more complicated. So many options, standards and details and it's just one aspect of retro PC's... Sometimes when I read about or watch a video about them, I feel like I'm watching a video about alien technology, which kinda makes it oddly that much more interesting to me. I usually end up googling different things to understand more about them until I get exhausted and completely forgot what I was watching/reading in the first place....and unfortunately most of time feeling none the wiser... It's kinds crazy things like sound cards and audio in general, have seem to be almost forgotten about when it comes to modern PC builds with it being relegated to simple on-board audio usually paired with average speakers, with it generally considered to be more than good enough for most people. Are they even a thing nowadays? I know they are still out there, but you almost never hear anyone talk about them, at least outside of professional use cases anymore. Last time I heard someone recommend one, was for a HTPC specifically to set-up a surround sound system.
I still remember seeing prototypes of this card floating around at VCF and knew that projects like this will be an obvious solution for the future of PC gaming!
Something that would be neat for a successor: Switchable output filters for the SoundBlaster portion. SB Pro and earlier have a characteristic way of playing back low-sample rate sounds like those used in Doom, Duke 2 etc. On SB16 and later the same effects lack some punchiness. So being able to switch that to accomodate different games would be cool.
Honestly the only extra feature I could think to add for a possible Orpheus 3 would be the ability to apply reverb to the FM output like the AWE32 could. I'm no FPGA expert, but I imagine a simple Schroeder-style reverb like freeverb wouldn't take up too much space on the chip
This card with a SB audigy chip would be wicked awesome. I know that is a little too new for some of the systems this card is made for, but there was a weird time when there were MBs that had some of those chips on them while also having PCI slots and supporting up to windows XP.
It’s great to see that sound cards like these are still made because music sounding just right is pretty much 50 % of the experience with the old games. Too bad for the price but it’s better to make a proper card with enough features so that it’s good enough for the job.
OMG THANK YOU SO MUCH. I HAVE HAD MEMORIES OF ONE MUST FALL IN MY HEAD FOREVER. I STILL HUM THE SONG ALL THE TIME, BUT I COULDN'T REMEMBER THE NAME OF THE GAME! You've made my year.
Wow, I really enjoyed this review. I'd love to get one of these cards as it's pretty much a perfect card for everything i'd use for my own DOS/Windows Super Socket 7 system. SPDIF, Wavetable Header, Upgradeable memory and support for GUS would be really nice. Thanks for making a video about this card. I couldn't think of anything useful i'd want to add to this card, so here's something silly instead: I'd want to add the Hanging note bug from the AWE-32 sound cards to this card. (I wouldn't really want to see this annoying bug on this card)
I thought I was intimidated when I built my first pc, but man oh man....My hat's off to those who built them back then (and even more so with building retro pc's nowadays with how rare and expensive parts are becoming and how information isn't as widely available as it once was)! I'd LOVE to build something a retro set-up like this, but I simply don't have the time it'd deserve to do it justice. Getting things set-up seems WAY more complicated than building a pc nowadays, with things being basically plug and play with very little tinkering required. Back then on the other hand, It's just seems like an endless rabbit hole, that seems to pull you deeper and deeper, with near endless options and variables to consider, with technology rapidly changing and evolving, and as soon as you think you are satisfied you find out it's just the beginning...if you're willing to put the time into learning and tinkering. As someone who's has played pc games like the ones show here but never really got into the technical side of things, at least not until I got older and the technology drastically changed, it's always just kinda of amazing to see how things worked back then and just how different things are now. It's definitely given me a better appreciation for the way things are today, but also a kind of odd yearning of things to return the "wild west' period of PC's, where everything was still so new and everything was changing and evolving so fast you could barely keep up.
I can't wait to get my hands on the Orpheus II "red edition". I managed to sneak a pre-order in. If you email them right now they MIGHT still have a few extra pre-order slots, despite the website saying pre-orders ended on August 15, 2024.
i love myself some LGR.... greetings from Woodgrainy northern germany... I did some FT2 tracks you loved... i know that.. ;) still.... I love your videos more... thank you sir!
I think you are officially my favorite UA-camr man love the content! Inspired me to build my first PC working on it right now Dell Optiplex GX260 currently only upgrade is a 1gb ram chip just ordered 2 more of those. If anyone sees this what's a good place to learn and ask questions about the hobby for a new guy?
The Gravis makes some nice sounds. I remember the Gravis UltraSound box on top of my Father's Desk in the 90s. I also remember the Gravis Gamepad I'd use to play Commander Keen on that thing. We had 4 computers, 286, 386, and two 486s back then. The 286 and 386 became our computers as kids (my parents old computers) whereas by Father got both he and my mother new 486s for work. I just remember I had basically every game imaginable on that computer because my Father would, umm, "Shareware" all the Warez. My first computer was either the Colleco Adam or the Commodore Vic-20, hard to remember which came first tbh as this was in the 80s.
For some systems it would seem it would be cool if you could somehow choose to only have the SB or Gravis portion active to help with resouce conflicts. A dip switch or some other way.
Take that idea one step further with your "some other way". Additional breakout board and bracket that allows you to attach an external switch so you can choose which device you want active before you turn your computer on. Like the breakout box from the All-in-wonders, but for a different purpose. Can be connected to the Orpheus card through an IDC cable. All period correct for the type of boards we had back then. lol.
I don't know about the GUS PnP version using the AMD InterWave chip, but the original GF1-based GUS cards did not use ANY resources until you initialized the card, usually in autoexec on startup.
What I really want is an 8 bit version. I'd be happy with a new card that was just a SB 1.5, with the SA1099's, with smart MPU-401 support that I could put into a PC/XT class machine. Maybe with tandy/jr sound? Maybe even do us a real solid by adding the holes for the "flat" T1K's (HX/EX) port since it's pin to pin?
When I upgraded to a Pentium 200 with a GUS ACE, I kept the Soundblaster 2.0 from my old 386DX40 alongside it for compatibility issues for games without GUS support. The GUS ACE (Audio Card Enhancer) had a passthrough 3,5 mm cable just for this reason.
Did you seriously just 3d-print a small thingumabob specifically made to show off computer cards? If so, approved!
darn right I did
Is it a doodad, a thingamabob or a widget?
Or maybe even a googaw...
@@mmmhorsesteaks it could be a doozeewhatsits.
@@richkawaiipikachui think its a chingadera
@@JaredConnell do you know that you just used a swear word?
I will never forget when we got a sound card and CD-ROM back in the early 90s. Completely blew my PC-speaker mind. It was a revolutionary experience.
Absolutely. It was interesting following the development of graphics throughout the 90s, but what absolutely changed everything for me was the sound.
I could not believe that I could hook up my pentium win95 machine to my hi-fi and play my CDs and my mp3 from there. What a time to be alive
Flash back of finally getting a sound card and speakers and CD ROM for my 486 windows 3.1
Same here, although I can't remember if I bought my Sound Blaster from CompUSA or Computer City. Definitely one of the two.
Clearly remember that day back in 1996. After the upgrade launched Prince of Persia 2. Had been playing that game for quite a while but then there was human voice in the intro along with unbelievable good bgm . "In ancient Persia...". Almost fell off my chair....
I miss getting a disc drive but sound cards have evolved to sound just as good if not better on a tiny chip. Just look at all the portable DAC/Amp combos on the market, a fraction of the size
This truly is the ultra-side sound of things.
...if had been combined with adlib gold ))
Yet another reason I continue loving this channel!
That card is looking like the holy grail of 90s sound cards. A single ISA slot used to do literally all the sounds (assuming no memory conflicts). Zero compromises and the ability to add MIDI is just the icing on an already delectable cake. I wonder how many of these OPL and AMD sound chips are still out there in the wild.
Also, what an era of computing. Where sound cards were a legit thing to upgrade your setup with and some of them had RAM slots.
It certainly makes up for the high price of 340euros/365bucks/290quid
@@nicwilson89 The holy grail of sound cards was never gonna be cheap.
@@nicwilson89 It's probably a good investment. There are probably limited numbers of those chips available. It almost certainly won't be available in 5 or 10 years.
It's the holy grail of 1985-1995 sound cards, but the later-90s introduced environmental audio effects and advanced surround sound which were mind-blowing at the time.
@@djhenyo so... the holy grail of 90's sound cards like he said.... anything past 1996 you can just use a PCI SB LIVE
Hearing Clint mix up two consecutive words in a line, and then instead of simply fixing it in post simply points it out & laughs over what he just said during editing, is a constant joy.
"The Ultra-side Sound of Things" is right up there with "Hoddware Oddness".
What ep was that on? I forgot
@@DryPaperHammerBro Look up "LGR Oddware - Thermaltake PC Drive Bay". That's the one with the "Hodware Oddness" in it.
Also "The KeyStik Clip-on Joystick for Keyboards: LGR Oddware" has the "constructions" instead of "instructions".
It was "Hoddware Oddities" and his laugh afterwards was legendary.
When everything old is new again is taken to the next Level...
The AC97 Audio header is a nice touch. I remember back in the day adding a sound card to a pre-built system usually meant sacrificing the front panel ports.
That Yucatan FX board playing the Duke nukem theme is a thing I did not know I needed!!! 🤯
Unfortunately not available to buy anymore 😢
The Dreamblaster X2GS is still available though and I believe uses the same or very similar GS sound chip
@@LGR I have it, but I dare say I have yet to find a bank that sounds the Yucatan
@@AngelDemonn You should be using the hardware GS bank. The samples are more or less the same, Yucatan is just super bass heavy out of the box, as well as prone to clipping issues.
I own the original Orpheus card which I got for my 486 desktop system with the built in speakers and I was impressed by that card. Just seeing the Orpheus 2 in your video certainly got my attention. Especially with the beautiful design, the care and passion taken to design this thing is absolutely amazing! I love the passion the retro community has for making these amazing sound card options available.
Man, I had a "10,000 in 1" shareware games and one must fall 2097 was on there. Our Presario definitely only had a Soundblaster card of some sort and I am blown away about the difference with the gravis
The way you describe sounds like the Sennheiser Orpheus, one of the best sounding headphones in the world
I didn’t realize how amazing Gravis Ultrasound is - I was always so attached to the Soundblaster
No GUS no demoscene.. a wasted life. Lucky you are still alive and can fix this
I still have my GUS. ( in my display cabinet )
It was one of the best buys i have ever done.
I have spend hours every day making music with programs like fasttracker.
Man, I miss the times when things could be mixed & matched instead of being thrown out if a single part breaks.
Yes, but on the other hand you now have the choice between hundreds of different RGB case fans instead 😅
Well I could get a better sound card over the on board... I mean I won't fit because on my 4090's fat arse, but I could!
@@TEBLify Fair enough! :D
@@PoisonedAl imagine having a 4090 what games do you even play 😭
@@godzzwrath I would play OSRS with it
8:28 That player interface is so awesome!
Chiptune scene with .xm FastTracker, .it with Impulse and .mod ;)
5:34 the more I listen to this, the more it sounds like something you'd find in those knockoff t-shirts. Now here's something to add to the LGR merch.
So cool. I used to make S3M's and Impulse Tracker mods back in the day using my Gravis Ultrasound. What a gamechanger it was when I upgraded to it from my original Thunderboard.
I am always impressed with all the cool stuff being made like this, would have never imagined people would be making stuff like that now back in the day.
The retro scene people are awesome.
My name came up in the purchase list for this just before the video came out. Cost a damn fortune after converting to Canadian dollars, but I'm stoked to get it for a future DOS build project I'm planning. Can't wait!
In terms of what I'd add to a next-gen model, I'd say probably the AdLib Gold (just to complete the trifecta) and I'd love to see genuine Sound Blaster chips in it, though I'm sure that would be a tall order. Other than maybe the ability to swap out the headphone amplifiers for the truly nutbar among us, I can't think of much else.
I love the fact that in the audio sections on the card they didn't use normal electrolytic's and instead went for nichicon ufg Fine Gold audio grade electrolytic capacitors, really no expense spared AT ALL, the sound speaks for itself!
What we need is a PCI Express sound card that's compatible with the old MS-DOS sound card so that we can add DOS sound support with a "modern" computer running FreeDOS.
The problem you're going to run into though is that there's no PC DOS drivers for the pcie bus. So there's no way for your software to talk to your Hardware cuz you can't communicate on the bus.
@@RowanHawkins But what's preventing a modern operating system like FreeDOS to have drivers for PCIe devices?
There are USB sound cards with retro chips on them specifically for DOSBox:
ua-cam.com/video/dg33QLkHAu4/v-deo.html
The problem is that while PCI Express cards could respond to all the right I/O ports, PCI and PCI Express cannot do ISA compatible DMA like what DOS programs expect. There's nothing for PCI and PCI Express to do that with.
When sound cards moved from the ISA bus to the PCI bus in the late 1990s, they either didn't bother with DOS games, or you had to load EMM386.EXE and run a special TSR in the background that intercepted the I/O to emulate a Sound Blaster for the DOS game, or you had to run the DOS game in a Windows 9x DOS box where Windows or a 3rd party driver would emulate it.
There were some hardware level hacks too at the time. On some motherboards there was a special cable you had to connect to the card and the motherboard to carry the ISA DMA signals. On Intel boards, there was a hack called "Distributed DMA" which allowed the PCI card to fiddle with the motherboard DMA controller to fake ISA DMA which sometimes worked. But that hack didn't last very long.
On a related note, you may have noticed that the disappearance of the standard floppy controller in the late 2000s coincided with a particular version of Intel motherboard chipsets where they completely dropped support for any kind of ISA DMA at all, because the standard floppy controller and floppy drive also used ISA DMA to operate.
so very cool that new cards are still out there. That being said my favorite card of all time is the awe 64 gold. I think it is because it was what I had back in the day.
As a GUS Extreme owner I can say it's by far the best sound card of it's time. It was basically a must in the demo scene
Can anyone explain what the demo scene is?
The price isn't bad considering what it can do and how much work it probably took
I was thinking the same. The appreciation and effort that went into it, I respect the price. It's deserved.
This sound card is what I've always wanted for a retro pc setup. I hope one day we can get some of the old stock chips replaced with FPGAs.
Also respect for playing Jazz 3D music.
Just got mine a few days ago and totally happy to have it. Will put it in P100 build probably.
I gotta say, that is a satisfyingly well-designed PCB. Love the clean layout.
7:46 That was a catchy tune!
One must fall 2097 is still one my most favorite game of all times
Just hearing that opening explosion/thunder for one must fall instantly brought a smile to my face! Loved playing that game!
You still can, they released it as freeware ages ago. I load up DOSBox and play it every once in a while.
I suddenly went to grade school hearing the intro.
I really enjoy watching old LGR videos and seeing how far Clint has taken his channel. The channel could compete with any cable or tv show. Best UA-camr.
They should make a V3 with an FPGA, these ASICs are getting harder to source and make up the majority of the cost. An FPGA card could have multiple soundcards flashed onto it and different combinations to use, all while taking up a much smaller footprint than a custom card that uses multiple ASICs. A prototype of this was pitched at VCF Midwest so it's an idea that has been around for a while now.
I think this is the most ideal solution. I wonder if that card that was being developed and shown at VCF Midwest would have seen the light of day if the chip shortage hadn't happened...
i thought the same!
Somebody have to create the FPGA first. And then thre is the question - isn't it simpler to have it emulated on something like RPi. Or isn't it simpler to have it in DosBox. I just like it as is - the discrete sound card on real chips. On real device with real hard drive and real CRT.
Exactly what I thought when I saw the price and that salvaged chip. An FPGA might even be cheaper...
@@rkurbatov no need to "create" a new FPGA - they are called "Field Programmable Gate Array" for a reason - simply put, you can "rewire" the transistors inside a FPGA any way you want so they can be anything you tell them to be.
If you have the wiring diagram of the real chip and an FPGA that has enough transistors inside to rewire, you can recreate an EMU8k and a CT1749 for example ... or even a voodoo cards TMU and FBI.
It's the closest you can get to the real chip and, if done right, indistinguishable in function - it beats "software emulation" like dosbox or some RPi thing.
Only downside is that FPGAs cost money too, and the more capable they get, the more money they'll cost - so - it might not matter if you use FPGA or NOS/Salvaged original chips, you might end up with a mighty expensive clone card either way
oohhhhh man that card is dope maybe have to get one one day, I have plenty of isa sound cards to play with though. so glad that there is people that can build this stuff and keep the retro computers going strong :)
Huge fan of my original Orpheus and the MK8330, these guys do amazing work. I'm on the fence about this one - not sure the GUS support is worth the upgrade as I doubt I'll use it outside of novelty value. Still very cool that it exists!
I really miss my GUS, not sure what happened to it, but hands down my favorite sound card. It was the PnP Pro as I recall. It's replacement was the SB X-Fi Xtreme music with the full front panel. Almost as amazing. Now I run whatever my MB has 😢
oh. my. god. for years I've thought about that fish game, and could never figure out what it was called, when I randomly see it in an LRG video and get hit with a megaton blast of nostalgia and now know its name. odell down under.
I built my own 20 Mhz computer and added a simple soundcard. After those wonderful months I decided to step into Soundblaster mode. Never did anything really with midi because... For me it all started with a Pong computer, Atari 2600 (still have it) from there the C64 road to Amiga and now rely on pc with windows 10 almost 11. I had a blast time and love to see your passion still alive.
5:29 - "the Ultraside sound of things."
It does have a nice ring to it.
A whole episode on Gravis would be appreciated. Have very fond memories of my Gravis joystick with its foamy grip and red buttons.
There is one. It was even mentioned.
The UltraSide sound of things, that's what you should call your first album
Surprised we didn't hear how it played the LGR staple of CANYON.MID.
i remember One Must Fall. I had the shareware version on my 386 dx 25 i think. It was novel for me to play pc games with a game pad when i was older as we only had consoles to use growing up.
Hearing that Gravis music gave me nostalgic feeling spine tingling chills. Why can't modern games have music like that?
Hopefully someone uploads System Shock 1 playing on this. It's amazing how different cards and soundfonts change the music in that game.
This is really cool stuff. I guess the next thing I would like to see is a recreation of a classic motherboard.
While this card is clearly amazing, I love your bracket stand for putting the cards on the display!
Thanks! It's a design by Shelby of Tech Tangents, link in the description :)
I just got this card a couple of weeks ago and I must say it is phenomenal! I installed it on my Pentium system with 98lite. There was some hassle on the windows side with resources, but that is not Orpheus fault. It is just the PnP and so much stuff there which require IO, IRQ and DMA and Windows likes to throw those around. I needed to configure PCMidi or IRQ3 too. Pure DOS should be much more easier.
5:28 "The Ultraside sound of *things*!" 😂
At 10:02
The on-screen game....
Tyrian!!!!
YESSSS!!!!!!!!
Greatest game from the era!!
Hmm... sounds promising. Let's see what it's made of 👍🎶🎵🎶
Oh. What a sweet multipurpose card it is.
Thanks for the One Must Fall 2097 music test. The menu music is great.
Actually it's been my ringtone for many, many years. 😃
Well, absolutely need to get one now. Jazz Jackrabbit GUS tunes sold me.
I had a gus and was very proud that I lived near the manufacturer!!! Burnaby BC I think
Man I'm not gonna lie, for that kinda sound from that speaker is really awesome
I am one of those lucky ones that purchased a Ultrasound (Max!) back in the day, and I have also collected over the years a nice lot of ISA Soundblasters, so I will not need this, but it is beyond fantastic seeing there is still passionate people creating amazing things like this. It is expensive, but back then that Gravis was also a massive amount of money, at least here. One of my favorite pieces of hardware I have been so lucky to get, and even luckier to preserve (I wish I could go back in time and prevent myself from selling my 1st gen Vodoo1 card)
From this video, I am jumping into the card stand STL head first. I have been for ages being a lazy ass about finding a nice way to have my collection of cards properly displayed, and this design is awesome. Cant wait to test it.
Anything that even suggests the Gravis Ultrasound makes me happy. I loved, loved, loved my UltraSound back in the day.
I think the integrated SCSI interface idea would add capabilities to a lot of systems out there. I only had IDE, parallel, and serial on my system growing up. Seeing interesting devices that utilized the standard filled me with envy for some reason....
I was admittedly zoning out a little bit while watching it, but that One Must Fall lightning and theme song immediately snapped my attention back. Love that game.
These are going to be in super limited supply, all of the new old stock chips required to make these are getting impossible to find. I am so glad I got ordered before this video went live. Just like the Goldlib.
The first thing I thought of on seeing it was wondering if it would be possible to replace the new old stock chips with some sort of FPGA replacement. The problem is that it would probably be very time consuming, and definitely expensive to make, though the likes of the MiSTer project and the Analogue clone consoles have shown it is possible in theory.
No matter how many of LGR"s videos on sound cards I watch, and I do love watching and learning about them, I always end up more confused then when I began and that's despite Clint's calm and easy to understand explanations. It just seems whenever I think I'm getting a grasp on it, it just gets more and more complicated. So many options, standards and details and it's just one aspect of retro PC's...
Sometimes when I read about or watch a video about them, I feel like I'm watching a video about alien technology, which kinda makes it oddly that much more interesting to me. I usually end up googling different things to understand more about them until I get exhausted and completely forgot what I was watching/reading in the first place....and unfortunately most of time feeling none the wiser...
It's kinds crazy things like sound cards and audio in general, have seem to be almost forgotten about when it comes to modern PC builds with it being relegated to simple on-board audio usually paired with average speakers, with it generally considered to be more than good enough for most people. Are they even a thing nowadays? I know they are still out there, but you almost never hear anyone talk about them, at least outside of professional use cases anymore. Last time I heard someone recommend one, was for a HTPC specifically to set-up a surround sound system.
I still remember seeing prototypes of this card floating around at VCF and knew that projects like this will be an obvious solution for the future of PC gaming!
Something that would be neat for a successor: Switchable output filters for the SoundBlaster portion. SB Pro and earlier have a characteristic way of playing back low-sample rate sounds like those used in Doom, Duke 2 etc. On SB16 and later the same effects lack some punchiness. So being able to switch that to accomodate different games would be cool.
Clint, we need a remix of "The ultraside sound of things" now.
I love the Gravis Ultrasound. I have two of the Plug and Play version that you have.
7:57 - I absolutely just hummed LeBouche's "Be My Lover" to this and it synced PERFECTLY
I never knew how good the menu music for OMF 2097 could sound...
Honestly the only extra feature I could think to add for a possible Orpheus 3 would be the ability to apply reverb to the FM output like the AWE32 could. I'm no FPGA expert, but I imagine a simple Schroeder-style reverb like freeverb wouldn't take up too much space on the chip
Or even the Surround Sound Module that the AdLib Gold card uses, that thing adds all kinds of neat DSP effects to the OPL3
Pretty cool soundcard, but what really tickles my pickle is when that glorious MT-32 appears. ❤
yes
I wish we could go back to the times of hardware accelerated sound.
This card with a SB audigy chip would be wicked awesome. I know that is a little too new for some of the systems this card is made for, but there was a weird time when there were MBs that had some of those chips on them while also having PCI slots and supporting up to windows XP.
It’s great to see that sound cards like these are still made because music sounding just right is pretty much 50 % of the experience with the old games. Too bad for the price but it’s better to make a proper card with enough features so that it’s good enough for the job.
I love these mid-cut bloopery thingies :D
OMG THANK YOU SO MUCH. I HAVE HAD MEMORIES OF ONE MUST FALL IN MY HEAD FOREVER. I STILL HUM THE SONG ALL THE TIME, BUT I COULDN'T REMEMBER THE NAME OF THE GAME! You've made my year.
Welcome... to the ULTRASIDE!
This..... is the SOUND.... of THINGS!!
wow, my epic pinball never sounded this well!
Love soundcards, tracker music and LGR, so this episode is a blast!
like a vudu GPU sir👍😎....i am from Borneo 🇲🇾♥️🇺🇲...have a nice day sir LGR
Wow, I really enjoyed this review.
I'd love to get one of these cards as it's pretty much a perfect card for everything i'd use for my own DOS/Windows Super Socket 7 system. SPDIF, Wavetable Header, Upgradeable memory and support for GUS would be really nice. Thanks for making a video about this card.
I couldn't think of anything useful i'd want to add to this card, so here's something silly instead: I'd want to add the Hanging note bug from the AWE-32 sound cards to this card. (I wouldn't really want to see this annoying bug on this card)
I was in the shower when I started hearing the One Must Fall soundtrack and I immediatly started smiling. This is what makes Clint, Clint!
I'd love to see a future version have mpeg decoding for dvd drives or possibly even replicate the 3do on a card system
A great video to relax after an afternoon of hard study.
I thought I was intimidated when I built my first pc, but man oh man....My hat's off to those who built them back then (and even more so with building retro pc's nowadays with how rare and expensive parts are becoming and how information isn't as widely available as it once was)! I'd LOVE to build something a retro set-up like this, but I simply don't have the time it'd deserve to do it justice.
Getting things set-up seems WAY more complicated than building a pc nowadays, with things being basically plug and play with very little tinkering required. Back then on the other hand, It's just seems like an endless rabbit hole, that seems to pull you deeper and deeper, with near endless options and variables to consider, with technology rapidly changing and evolving, and as soon as you think you are satisfied you find out it's just the beginning...if you're willing to put the time into learning and tinkering.
As someone who's has played pc games like the ones show here but never really got into the technical side of things, at least not until I got older and the technology drastically changed, it's always just kinda of amazing to see how things worked back then and just how different things are now. It's definitely given me a better appreciation for the way things are today, but also a kind of odd yearning of things to return the "wild west' period of PC's, where everything was still so new and everything was changing and evolving so fast you could barely keep up.
Always a fan of when Clint busts out the trackers and plays some mods ;D
When the first lightning sound came from OMF2097 i INSTANTLY got goosebumps !
I can't wait to get my hands on the Orpheus II "red edition". I managed to sneak a pre-order in. If you email them right now they MIGHT still have a few extra pre-order slots, despite the website saying pre-orders ended on August 15, 2024.
I will never forget....One must fall.....great soundtrack, and great game. many many many hours spend in greatness right there
Ah, so basically a BitchinFast 3D 2000.... but for soundcards. And it really does work!
I remember seeing my kid for the first time, using an ultraside scanner!
Adding CMS and Tandy sound capabilities would be a nice Orpheus 3
i love myself some LGR.... greetings from Woodgrainy northern germany... I did some FT2 tracks you loved... i know that.. ;) still.... I love your videos more... thank you sir!
I would love to have one of those in pci or pci-express!
I think you are officially my favorite UA-camr man love the content! Inspired me to build my first PC working on it right now Dell Optiplex GX260 currently only upgrade is a 1gb ram chip just ordered 2 more of those. If anyone sees this what's a good place to learn and ask questions about the hobby for a new guy?
The Gravis makes some nice sounds. I remember the Gravis UltraSound box on top of my Father's Desk in the 90s. I also remember the Gravis Gamepad I'd use to play Commander Keen on that thing. We had 4 computers, 286, 386, and two 486s back then. The 286 and 386 became our computers as kids (my parents old computers) whereas by Father got both he and my mother new 486s for work. I just remember I had basically every game imaginable on that computer because my Father would, umm, "Shareware" all the Warez.
My first computer was either the Colleco Adam or the Commodore Vic-20, hard to remember which came first tbh as this was in the 80s.
That percussion on the YucatanFX is blissful 🤤
They are going to sell out now. Sounds pretty good.
The ultraside is my favourite sound things can be on.
For some systems it would seem it would be cool if you could somehow choose to only have the SB or Gravis portion active to help with resouce conflicts. A dip switch or some other way.
Take that idea one step further with your "some other way". Additional breakout board and bracket that allows you to attach an external switch so you can choose which device you want active before you turn your computer on. Like the breakout box from the All-in-wonders, but for a different purpose. Can be connected to the Orpheus card through an IDC cable. All period correct for the type of boards we had back then. lol.
I don't know about the GUS PnP version using the AMD InterWave chip, but the original GF1-based GUS cards did not use ANY resources until you initialized the card, usually in autoexec on startup.
That’s impressive and amazing! Kudos to the inventor!
What I really want is an 8 bit version. I'd be happy with a new card that was just a SB 1.5, with the SA1099's, with smart MPU-401 support that I could put into a PC/XT class machine. Maybe with tandy/jr sound?
Maybe even do us a real solid by adding the holes for the "flat" T1K's (HX/EX) port since it's pin to pin?
I love those Roland speakers you have.
The soundtrack of that last fighting game is something that Umek could produce in the mid to late 90's.
When I upgraded to a Pentium 200 with a GUS ACE, I kept the Soundblaster 2.0 from my old 386DX40 alongside it for compatibility issues for games without GUS support. The GUS ACE (Audio Card Enhancer) had a passthrough 3,5 mm cable just for this reason.