'Retro Games' Announces A New Commodore 64 (retrogames.biz) 118
Long-time Slashdot reader cshamis tipped us off to this story in HotHardware:
It is official, folks -- Retro Games is releasing a full-size retro reboot of the original Commodore 64, called TheC64, on December 5...
Of course, modern amenities abound for this reboot. TheC64 can connect to any modern TV via HDMI, to deliver "crisp 720p HD visuals" at 60Hz (USA) or 50Hz (Europe). It also comes with an updated joystick featuring 8 buttons, micro switches, and USB connectivity. It bears a passing resemblance to the original, but with additional bells and whistles. TheC64 will arrive with 64 games preinstalled, including titles such as California Games, Destroyer, Impossible Mission (1 and 2), Monty on the Run, Speedball 2, and many others... [P]layers will be able to add more games from a USB memory stick (not included).
The original Commodore 64 is widely considered the best-selling single-model PC of all time. Estimates have sales pegged at somewhere between 10-17 million units.
Of course, modern amenities abound for this reboot. TheC64 can connect to any modern TV via HDMI, to deliver "crisp 720p HD visuals" at 60Hz (USA) or 50Hz (Europe). It also comes with an updated joystick featuring 8 buttons, micro switches, and USB connectivity. It bears a passing resemblance to the original, but with additional bells and whistles. TheC64 will arrive with 64 games preinstalled, including titles such as California Games, Destroyer, Impossible Mission (1 and 2), Monty on the Run, Speedball 2, and many others... [P]layers will be able to add more games from a USB memory stick (not included).
The original Commodore 64 is widely considered the best-selling single-model PC of all time. Estimates have sales pegged at somewhere between 10-17 million units.
Re:Who asked for this? (Score:5, Insightful)
You seem to have no idea about the retro computing scene. There are thousands of die-hard fans with time and money to plow into this. It's a niche market, ever heard of them?
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Because this is just another ARM box. Geeks who grew up with the C64 are smart enough to run an emulator on their computers or on a Raspberry Pi.
Besides that, the nostalgia market for the C64 is probably weak right now. It would be different if it were 15 years ago when Vice City came out (with its retro C64 intro).
PC and Raspberry Pi don't have the C64 like keyboard which adds to the cool factor of this thing. My budget on the other hand is going, meh...
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PC and Raspberry Pi don't have the C64 like keyboard which adds to the cool factor of this thing.
So buy a C64 keyboard lookalike, and attach it to a modern computer? Heck, I'm typing these words on a faux Model M. Obviously, the design of Model M was worlds better than C64, but the concept is the same: USB instead of AT DIN, etc. You could stuff an ARM board inside the keyboard's chassis, but as you need long cables going to a monitor/TV anyway, I don't get the point (but I'm no hardware hacker).
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They would have to sell an 'authentic' C64-like keyboard by mail order or on a website with a no return policy.
Anybody who knows the true C64 keyboard experience would expect a really terrible, barely usable keyboard that was designed for the hands of a nine year old. They would return the keyboard if it was up to modern standards because it would be so inauthentic.
And everybody else... well. they would return the thing because of it being... a terrible keyboard designed for the hands of a nine year old.
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You misspelled "Sinclair ZX81"
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Re:Who asked for this? (Score:4, Funny)
The really smart ones have a collection of real hardware.
Fear my geekness:
Two 1581 drives
Two 1764 RAM expansions boosted to 512k each
1541-II and 1571 drives
C64C, C128D, and SX-64
1351 mouse
Yeah, that's right, I'm legit.
(ha ha, I know I'm a loser)
Re: Who asked for this? (Score:1)
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Re: Who asked for this? (Score:2)
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You could've saved to cassette, booted DOS, loaded from cassette, and saved to disk. Cassette I/O was an option all the way through to the IIe; it was only the IIc, IIGS, and IIc+ that didn't have it. With your mention of "the very early 1980s," I'm guessing you were probably using a II+.
I was wondering the same thing (Score:2)
Bringing back an Amiga, or Atari ST would make some sense to me as there are more dedicated fanbases...
Just because the C64 was the best selling then, may not mean it has as much demand now as other systems.
Re:I was wondering the same thing (Score:4)
Just because the C64 was the best selling then, may not mean it has as much demand now as other systems.
Yeah, actually it does. The world wild Amiga sales where under 5 million compared to the C-64 almost 20 million units. That makes the Amiga a niche market of a niche market. Not a good place to be. There are far more retro C-64 gamers out there than there are Amiga and ST gamers put together.
Besides the two are a different culture it seems. Most C-64 gamers that I know are more than happy with a emulated hardware and games. All the retro Amiga people I know, the serous ones, don't do it unless it's on original hardware, or as close as they can get.
To quote an Amiga friend of mine, "What is the fucking point? Any fuck-tard can run a emulator." Or something like that.
Re: I was wondering the same thing (Score:3)
See but thatâ(TM)s exactly what I mean, the Amiga guys are far more serious about it. If you released new Amiga hardware youâ(TM)d probably sell way more of it than releasing c64 hardware where most people are just fine using simulators to play some games... c64 owners just want the games, Amiga owners actually want to use the computer.
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There's m68k support in the kernel even today. And whenever someone suggests dropping it, an angry mob with torches and pitchforks pops up.
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"The world wild Amiga sales where under 5 million compared to the C-64 almost 20 million units"
just read an article where it seems likely that the total C-64 sales were conflated and were maybe more like 12.5 million based on serial numbers.
https://www.pagetable.com/?p=5... [pagetable.com]
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12.5 million. That is still a reasonable number of units moved. More realistic too. I wonder if the 17+ million unit numbers include 128s. Those can run in C-64 mode.
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There were some good games on the C64. Fun times. Presumably you can load other games than the ones it comes with. Spelunker, Lode Runner, Archon, Mail Order Monsters, all great fun.
Doesn't look like it's for sale in the US though.
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I had so much fun back in the day with Impossible Mission and Lode Runner, etc. that I might be persuaded to buy one of these.
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My earliest experiments with electronic music were with that SID. I would shortly thereafter start collect
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M.U.L.E.
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Games? I would think everybody would want one of these to run the GeosWorks Ensemble on. And one of those little modems that plugs on the back. I used to belong to a BBS that ran on a C64 with several 1541 drives plugged into it. It ran the CNet software.
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I am disappointed. My troll follower is boring. Can I apply for an upgrade somewhere?
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The Mini version of this (without keyboard) was first released in Europe before it was released in North America.
So I'm guessing that a full-size version will be coming to the US.
The differences with the TheC64 Mini was in the games selection and in that they ran at 60Hz instead of 50Hz. The screen refresh rate defines the speed of the game: most games of the era were programmed to run in sync with the video signal.
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Lode Runner is so much fun! I got a Lode Runner app but it's hard to control with the on-screen pad.
Of course there are new games developed recently like Sam's Journey that are pretty cool too. And there's the games from the end of the 64's reign that I never heard of from back then, like Mayhem in Monsterland.
Re:Who asked for this? (Score:4, Interesting)
I had a C64 when they first came out. It was fun.
But if you wanted a C64 now and the retro experience, why wouldn't you just buy an original one? They're still around.
Might not even need to buy one. Ask your parents (grandparents?) if they have one in the attic.
My own C64 eventually floated off into the sea of nieces and nephews.
Games are crazy expensive (Score:2)
Yeah, you can buy a flashcart, but by the time you've done that plus maybe recapped the board and bought a new power supply you're in pretty deep.
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Re: Who asked for this? (Score:1)
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It is the best selling computer of all time so statistically there are bound to be significant market interest in a retro comeback.
I, for one, am VERY interested! And i am just some random dude on the shell of the formerly great /.
Re:Who asked for this? Already 2 others selling (Score:1)
Well, there's enough market that a few other vendors are already selling several different C64 systems.
C64DTV: https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
C-One: https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
Ultimate 64: https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
C64 reloaded: https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
TheC64 Mini: https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
They got alot of flack about TheC64 Mini not having a functional keyboard. Now they are making that functional keyboard version, so there must be demand for it, or there would not be this s
There are better options (Score:4, Interesting)
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Could be good for someone looking for a reliable, easy to use system (plugs directly in to HDMI, decent joysticks don't cost a fortune on eBay etc.) Hopefully it still has BASIC, which would make it a great system for people to learn what coding in the 80s was like. Would be even better if you could write code in assembler on a PC and download it for debugging.
The 8 Bit Guy is in the process of making a "C64-like" system for that exact purpose, although the project has gone off the rails a bit with a daft c
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W00t! (Score:1, Informative)
LOAD "*",8,1
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Or if you're super cool, replace "LOAD" with L-Shift-O, makes a funny looking thing like L|- "*",8,1
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Why do you keep ragging about the C64 keyboard?
As I remember it, it was pretty good for its day. It had real keys, unlike the membrane and chicklet keyboards of most of its competitors. It was no IBM model M, and maybe the Apple ][ keyboard was slightly better, but a C64 was a small fraction of the cost of those machines.
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I was going to say more or less the same thing. The C64 had a far better keyboard than the ZX Spectrum and a bunch of other low-cost home computers. There were better keyboards on the Apple II series, some of the MSX computers, etc. but the C64 was about the middle of the pack.
I want! (Score:2)
This is cool. I never had a Commodore before but this is something I was certainly aware of and wanted as a kid.
I'd buy it if it was just a C64 looking keyboard. Having it work like a real C64 is just a bonus.
That makes me think that a neat feature for something like this is a keyboard mode. Put a USB-B port and a switch on the back, plug into any computer that takes a USB keyboard, flip switch, and party like it's 1989. That would be a nice bonus for people looking for a retro look on their desk, not n
Very little has been revealed (Score:4, Insightful)
Very little was revealed in the Retro Games announcement.
What is the processor? An updated version of the 6502? Can you add a Z80 CP/M board to it? Do USB flash drives take the place of cassettes? How do they work? Does it come with a telephone modem? What is the SDK for it? Does it still use memory mapped I/O?
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Given what we've seen with the C64 mini, it's likely an emulation. It's basically the C64 mini expanded with a keyboard and likely boots to BASIC rather than their menu, but you never know. And yes, t
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Was.
It was one of those "plug and play" t
Nobody's asking the magic question! (Score:2)
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I think that folks aren't going to really be happy with this unless it contains a transistor-perfect emulator or a very-close facsimilie thereof of the C64, complete with c64 BASIC.
I'm not terribly familiar with the state of c64 emulation. I'm in the apparent minority of people who grew up in that era that went on to become techies that did NOT own a c64 or Vic20. That said, I know that newer machines do have some reference-quality emulators out there. I can't imagine that the c64 would be terribly difficu
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Get some tattooed ladies and imitate John Wick (Score:1)
That's about all I can think that this C64 "reboot" is worth.
I'm amazed that a large, international crime syndicate still uses C64s to send out the text messages.
Let's see what Number 4 brings up - great series!
Demoscene? (Score:2)
The demoscene is still alive on the C64, with replacement parts for the the original hardware still being sold at parties. The "SID" audio chip almost defines the chip tune genre and is used by several well known musicians.
The C64 has a loyal following that goes well beyond video games. I hope they did the best they could to provide the most accurate emulation possible. Demoscene productions can be very tricky to emulate. And the analog circuitry for audio is hard to reproduce well.
My first two computers were Commodore (Score:2)
A VIC-20 back in 1981.
A Commodore 128 in 1985!
Then I went to a PC in 1990, an 80286 12 MHZ.
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Then I went to a PC in 1990, an 80286 12 MHZ.
And then you installed Civilization and played it so much you almost failed your first year in college?
'cause that would remind me of a certain guy I know....
What? No cartridge slot or slow floppy drive (Score:2)
So then itâ(TM)s not really a C64? (Score:1)
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Who else became a fan of Commodore.... (Score:2)
...because the early 1980s advertisements featured William Shatner?
How about Atari? (Score:2)
I was an Atari partisan in the 8-bit days, holding the line against those "commies". Someone do an Atari 800XL version of this and I might be tempted. Then again, today's Atari could produce a keyboard variant of their new VCS 400/800 console (after it finally ships!) and an emulation package, why not?
maybe not perfect (Score:2)
we don't know all the details, and it might not be perfect, but it is at least a very good step in the right direction and something most people would have wanted instead of the first iteration, which was much smaller and had a non-functional keyboard.
this one can even start in the well known blue basic ready? prompt. hdmi, better joystick and ability to add more games from USB.
even for most retro gamers this is perfect.
Retro Games? (Score:2)
Isn't Retro Games the same company that failed (scammed?) to produce the Coleco Chameleon system after a well-funded Kickstarter?