this post was submitted on 17 Oct 2023
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FPGA Gaming

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A fediverse community dedicated to gaming hardware, clone consoles, flashcarts, and other accessories based on field-programmable gate array (FPGA) and similar technology. A place for engineers, developers, and FPGA gaming fans to discuss news, facilitate development, and enjoy a new passionate community!

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Over the past few months the MARS team has been teasing a new FPGA-based system: Multi Arcade & Retro System. The concept is similar to the MiSTer, but running on its own custom, more powerful hardware. They're expecting to launch it early next year at a $700 price point...

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[–] [email protected] 2 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) (2 children)

Though have worries about fragmentation of effort.

This is a common concern around open source communities, but I feel like it's rarely a big problem in my experience. As long as there are people with MiSTer setups there will almost certainly be some group of people developing for that platform and pushing it as far as they can.

Since the MiSTer is already pretty popular and relatively affordable, I think it'll continue to be the main focus on developers' time even after the MARS comes out.

Also, with 4k scalers coming in around 1k, and now this at hoping for $700… it’s all getting a bit rich for my hobby budget.

Yeah... $700 is a pretty big hit... but then again it's always been pretty easy to blow a grand on the retro gaming hobby. I'm honestly not sure whether I'll be able to justify buying one unless it really goes way beyond the MiSTer.

All in all, I think this thing sounds pretty cool and I'm excited to see a potential path forward beyond the DE-10 nano.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 11 months ago

Yeahm current MiSTer setups are still viable. You can do a lot with them. For MARSFPGA, I'm more interested on what kind of PC implementations it can do and if it can handle high-end 486 or Pentium CPUs.

[–] echo64 1 points 11 months ago

This is a common concern around open source communities, but I feel like it’s rarely a big problem in my experience. As long as there are people with MiSTer setups there will almost certainly be some group of people developing for that platform and pushing it as far as they can.

Since the MiSTer is already pretty popular and relatively affordable, I think it’ll continue to be the main focus on developers’ time even after the MARS comes out.

hmmm i gotta disagree. I've been working in and around open source stuff for a stupid long time, 15 years? 20? too long.

Development effort goes not towards where the users are, but towards where developers have interest. this is always true unless a third party is sponsoring to push development in a specific direction.

Development effort is going to go towards the platform where developers are interested. Maybe developers will be interested in the less powerful platform where you have to squeeze every LE to make cores fit, and don't have a unified large set of memory. Probably not is my guess.

So what we have is will people bother porting mars cores and enhancements to mister? we have a pretty good /analog/ in the analogue pocket to look at. that got a bunch of cores ported from mister to it, but those cores haven't really been updated much these days and new cores have mostly dried up outside of patreon things.

This isn't terrible, everything is succeeded some day, But I mentioned that mister does not feel like it's 100% finished yet for the cores it does support (outside of a few) so it feels a little sad.