A family of ARM-based personal computers from the 80s and 90s, designed by England-based Acorn Computers. |
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A MOS 6502-based personal computer from the 80s made by England-based Acorn Computers. |
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Acorn BBC Micro | A family of MOS 6502/6512-based personal computers from the 80s
and 90s made by Acorn Computers for the BBC Computer Literacy
Programme. |
Amstrad CPC | A family of Zilog Z80A-based personal computers from the 80s. |
Amstrad PCW | A family of Zilog Z80-based personal computers from the 80s and
90s. |
Apple I | The original 1977, MOS 6502-based Apple computer, created by
Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs. |
Apple II | A family of Apple II computers from the 80s and 90s, including
the Apple II+, IIe, IIc and IIgs. |
Apple iOS (iPhone / iPod Touch) | The OS that runs on the Apple family of smartphones, tablets
from the mid-2000's to modern day. |
Apple Lisa | A family of Apple computers from the 80s that became the
precursor to the Apple Macintosh. |
Apple Macintosh Classic | A family of Apple computers from the 90s and early 2000s, which
is the predecessor to the modern macOS. |
Atari 8-Bit | A family of Atari computers from the 70s, 80s, and 90s,
including the Atari 400, Atari 800 and the Atari XEGS. |
Atari 2600 | The original Atari 8-bit cartridge-based home console, released
in 1977. |
Atari 5200 | The successor to the Atari 2600, an 8-bit home console released
in 1982. |
Atari 7800 | The third 8-bit home console created by Atari and GCC, released
in 1986. |
Atari Jaguar | This 32-bit console was the last game console created by Atari,
release in 1993. |
Atari Lynx | The first handheld game console with a color screen, created by
Atari in 1989. |
Atari ST / STE |
This family of Atari home computers from the 80s includes the
Atari ST, STE, TT, MEGA STE and the Falcon. |
Bandai WonderSwan |
A family of handheld game consoles made by Bandai in the late
90s and early 2000s. |
Coleco ColecoVision |
A Zilog Z80-based home console made by Coleco in 1982. |
Coleco Adam |
A Zilog-80A-based home computer made by Coleco in 1983. |
Commodore 64 |
A MOS Technology 6510/8500-based computer created by Commodore
in 1982. |
Commodore 128 |
An 8-bit MOS Technology 6502-based home computer made by
Commodore in 1985. |
A family of 16-bit and 32-bit Motorola 68000-based computers made by Commodore in the 80s and 90s. |
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Commodore PET |
A family of MOS Technology 6502-based personal computers made by
Commodore in the late 70s and early 80s. |
Commodore VIC-20 |
An 8-bit MOS Technology 6502-based home computer made by
Commodore in the 80s. |
Elektronika BK |
A family of 16-bit PDP-11-compatible home computers made by NPO
Scientific Center in the 80s and 90s. |
GCE Vectrex | This vector-based system was the first video game system to
offer a built-in monitor. |
Google Android | A popular operating system that runs on many smartphones,
tablets and many other devices. |
Hewlett Packard Calculators HP-XX | Various programmable calculator models created by
Hewlett-Packard from the 70s to present day. |
IBM PowerPC | IBM's RISC-based processors created in part with Apple and Motorola. |
Java 2 Micro Edition (J2ME) | A version of the Java platform used primarily on cellphones
prior to smartphones. |
Magnavox Odyssey | The very first home console, created by Magnavox and Sanders
Associates in 1972. |
Magnavox Odyssey2 / Philips Odyssey2 | A second generation home video game console that was released in 1978. |
Mattel Intellivision | An 8-bit home console created by Mattel Electronics in 1979. |
Microsoft DOS (MS-DOS) | An operating system developed in the 80s and 90s by Microsoft,
for x86-based computers. |
Microsoft MSX1 / MSX2 | A family of computers based on the standard created by Microsoft
and ASCII. |
Microsoft XBOX | The first home console created by Microsoft in 2001, powered by
a Pentium III. |
Microsoft XBOX 360 | The second family of home consoles created by Microsoft in 2005,
powered by the Tri-Core Xenon. |
Microsoft XBOX One | The third family of home consoles created by Microsoft in 2013,
powered by the AMD Jaguar processors. |
Microsoft XBOX Series | The fourth family of home consoles created by Microsoft in 2020,
powered by a custom 64-bit AMD Zen 2 processor. |
NEC TurboGrafx-16 / PC Engine | An 8-bit home console designed by Hudson Soft and created by NEC
in 1987. |
Neo Geo | A family of arcade and home consoles created by SNK in the 90's
and early 00's. |
Neo Geo Pocket | A family of handheld game consoles made by SNK in 1998 and 1999. |
Nintendo 3DS | A family of dual-screen handheld game consoles made by Nintendo,
some of which featured stereoscopic 3D effects. |
Nintendo DS | A family of dual-screen handheld game consoles made by Nintendo. |
Nintendo NES / Famicom | A family of 8-bit home consoles, also know as the Family
Computuer in Japan, release by Nintendo in the 80s. |
Nintendo Game Boy / Color | A family of 8-bit handheld consoles, with both monochrome and
color LCD screens, created by Nintendo in the 80s and 90s. |
Nintendo Game Boy Advance | The 32-bit successor to the original Game Boy and the Game Boy Color,
released by Nintendo in 2001. |
Nintendo GameCube | The first disc-based home console created by Nintendo in 2001,
using Mini-DVDs as the game media. |
Nintendo N64 | The first cartridge-based 3-D home console created by Nintendo
in in 1997. |
Nintendo Pokémon Mini | A small handheld game console created by Nintendo in the early
00s, themed around the famous Pokémon franchise. |
Nintendo Super NES | Nintendo's 16-bit, cartridge-based home console created in the
90s, also known as the Super Famicom. |
Nintendo Switch | Nintendo's Hybrid home and handheld console family, created in
2017 using nVidia Tegra-based processors. |
Nintendo Virtual Boy | A tabletop virtual reality 32-bit console created by Nintendo in
1995, widely unpopular due to inducing headaches. |
Nintendo Wii | Nintendo's best-selling home console, released in 2006 and best
known for it's motion-controls. |
Nintendo Wii U | Nintendo's successor to the Wii, the Wii U introduced a tablet
as part of the system, and was released in 2012. |
Orao Eagle | An 8-bit computer used in Croatia and Vojvodina in the mid-80s
and early 90s |
Oric 1 / Atmos | A family of 8-bit, British home computers from the early 80s. |
Palm OS | A mobile operating system designed for PDAs and smartphones that
supported ARM and Motorola 68k processors. |
SAM Coupe 512K | An 8-bit, British, Zilog-Z80B-based home computer. |
SEGA Dreamcast | The final home console made by SEGA, which featuring online play and GD-ROM discs. |
SEGA Dreamcast VMU | The Visual Memory Unit for the SEGA Dreamcast, a portable memory card with a screen and buttons. |
SEGA Game Gear | SEGA's only portable game system, featuring a color screen. |
SEGA Genesis / Mega Drive SEGA CD / SEGA 32x |
SEGA's 16-bit console, and it's addons, also known as the "Tower of Power". |
SEGA Master System | SEGA's 8-bit home console, originally released in the '80s. |
SEGA Saturn | SEGA's first 3D home console, and the second console to have CD-ROM support. |
Sharp PC | A wide-range of pocket and home computers made by Sharp. |
Sinclair ZX Spectrum | An Zilog-80A-based, 8-bit home computer, developed by Sinclair Research and released in the '80s. |
Sony PlayStation | Sony's first home console, featuring 3D graphics and CD-ROM support. |
Sony PlayStation 2 | The successor to the original PlayStation, with improved graphics, and full DVD support. |
Sony PlayStation 3 | The successor to the PlayStation 2, featuring the Cell Processor and Bluray support. |
Sony PlayStation 4 | Sony's 4th generation home console, featuring an AMD-based APU and Bluray support. |
Sony PlayStation 5 | The successor to the PlayStation 5, featuring an AMD Zen2-based processor, and Ultra HD Bluray support. |
Sony PlayStation Portable | Sony's first portable game console, featuring UMD discs, Wi-Fi, and 3D graphics. |
Sony PlayStation Vita | The successor to the PlayStation Portable, featuring a touch-screen, camera and Bluetooth support. |
Sony PocketStation | A memory card for the Sony PlayStation featuring a screen and buttons. |
Symbian OS (N-Gage) | A mobile system designed for early smartphones, notably used on the N-Gage. |
Tandy TRS-80 | A desktop computer designed by Tandy Corporation and sold in Radio Shack starting in 1977. |
Texas Instruments Calculators Ti-XX | A family of pocket scientific calculators by Texas Instruments designed for advanced mathimatical calculations. |
Thompson MO5 | A French home computer release in 1984, utilizing the 1MHz Motorola 6809E processor. |
Thompson TO7 | A French home computer release in 1982, also known as the Thompson 9000, utilized the 1MHz Motorola 6809 processor. |
Thompson TO8 | A French home computer release in 1986, which replaced the Thompson T07, utilized the 1MHz Motorola 6809 processor. |
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Arcade Emulators | Emulators for a variety of arcade systems. |
Multiple System Emulators | Emulators for a variety of console and computer systems. |
Virtualization | Virtualization software for various computer systems |
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Frontends | Frontends for various emulators and games. |