MEGA65 Pre-orders

After seven years of work the biggest project MEGA ever started has reached an important milestone: The MEGA65 desktop computer can now be pre-ordered and production has begun! We are more than proud to announce that exactly 30 years after Commodore froze the development of the C65 we will start shipping the first batch of machines. The price of 666.66 Eur (net) is not only calculated with a sharp pencil and an homage to the launch of the Apple I, the C65 prototypes were also sold for the price of 666 Deutschmarks. Congratulations to all people involved, our partners, the wonderful community around the MEGA65 and all supporters of the project! You all made this one of a kind open-source non-profit community driven nerd dream come true!

Commodore 1565

Here at MEGA one mission is to preserve or even recreate objects, knowledge and code from the short but fragile digital history of mankind, save them and their creators from being forgotten and lost in oblivion. This time we enjoy to not only revive a very rare and widely unknown piece of hardware from the famous Commodore universe, once completed this object will also be a valuable addition to our famous 8-bit computer, the MEGA65, which itself is a recreation of the abandoned Commmodore 65 with modern features and enhancements: The Commodore 1565 floppy drive. This is a first 3D printed case version, designed for the MEGA65 project by Claudio Sánchez (Tokafondo) from Gran Canaria, Canary Islands and photographed by our brilliant Martin Streit.

C-One

Digital archeology of a different kind: Perhaps a pioneer for computers like the MEGA65, the C-One claimed to be the very first reconfigurable FPGA computer. Started in 2000 as a new C64 by Jeri Ellsworth, who soon after preferred to work on the C64DTV, the C-One was light and shadow at the same time. Only about 200 pieces were sold. This was perhaps due to the same problems that made it insanely difficult for us today to get the beast working: closed-source mentality, poor to non-existent documentation, dependence on exotic PC memory modules, horribly ugly form factor (ATX), way too unfocused. Why is there a PCI slot that no one has ever used? After three days of research, we brought this thing to life and gave it a fresh, more compact look – without an ATX case. It was fun because it was so complicated.

Interactive Fiction

With game graphics becoming more and more realistic, there has been a reanaissance of classic text adventures lately. Today called Interactive Fiction, text adventure games rely on high quality writing to base the story on and support the gamer with. While flashy graphics may be used, they are used to embellish the power of the text, not to replace it.
One of the biggest players in this industry was Infocom with their so-called Z-machine, poweing many fantastic classics like Zork, The Hitchiker’s Guide to the Galaxy and Planetfall. Text adventures aged so well that there are even new ones being released, like Hibernated 2 and Tristam Island (both available for MEGA65).
It has been over due to announce Z-machine for the MEGA65 computer, ported by MEGA65-team member Bit Shifter. Whether you use it on your real MEGA65 or with XEMU, there are dozens of intriguing worlds and stories to be discovered!

ZX-UNO 65

The Sinclair ZX Spectrum was one of the most popular 8-bit computers worldwide. Now you can enjoy thousands of great original games and demos on your favorite modern retro computer, the MEGA65. MEGA member sy2002 has ported the fantastic ZX UNO to run as an alternative parallel core on the MEGA65! This means you also get all the enhancements that have been produced for the ZX Spectrum over the past years, including audio and visual enhancements like ULAplus. And it even gets better: MEGA has received the license to distribute the ULAplus collection for free with each MEGA65 – over 300 great classics that even are visually enhanced. Great times for 8-bit fanatics! More details and news here.

C256 FOENIX

After quite a journey in these troubled times, a FOENIX has arrived at the MEGA archive. The C256 FOENIX is “a new retro computer” based on the WDC 65C816 CPU, a 8/16-bit microcontroller running at 14 MHz. Like the MEGA65 it is FPGA based, which means you get all the advantages of “real chips” over emulation based system. The FOENIX sports nice features like Sprites, SID and OPL3 audio chips and BASIC. It is worth mentioning that there is no big team behind this machine, but a single person (with help of the community): Stefany Allaire. In some of the pictures we have added the first MEGA65 prototype keyboard, which looks a lot like the new FOENIX keyboard (and also the Commander X16 one), and a MEGA65 for size comparism – enjoy!

The Retro Wars

With Retro Computing becoming more and more popular, a lot of different players have entered the game. Due to the nostalgia involved, there are many talented people who put lots of time into creating what they believe is a worthy successor to the once successful and still beloved original machine, while there are others just aiming for profit. Recently there have been several occurrences where the latter have tried to harm enthusiasts by spamming, false copyrights claims and fake emails. As it seems, this had the opposite effect of what was intended: Hobbyists and enthusiasts started to build an alliance. One person being on the “Light Side” is Sean Donohue from My Retro Computer. Today we present his fresh VIC-20 case with Cherry MX keyboard, both of very high quality. It can hold about any mini ITX mainboard – PC computing with style!