I'm having so much fun distributing these games in the art community that I'm way behind on posting my latest games online! But I thought this one would be familiar to most of you.
Jeff's Arcade
Jeff's Arcade
I've been having some success putting my games in galleries recently. Thanks to 6502dude and nbla000's advice, I now have a running game exhibit that the curators can activate themselves.
I'm having so much fun distributing these games in the art community that I'm way behind on posting my latest games online! But I thought this one would be familiar to most of you.


I'm having so much fun distributing these games in the art community that I'm way behind on posting my latest games online! But I thought this one would be familiar to most of you.
Jeff,
this is great. To me growing up in the 70s and 80s the sounds and graphics of 8bit are art to me rather than cows cut in half and unmade beds
Galaxian thrum of the wave moving, Galaxian peeshoo missile sound, Pacman startup sound, Jeff Minter's awesome Sonix!
Tempest and Starwars vector graphics.
Your games especially Ten-Ten have that quality of gameplay that is simple to pickup and hard to master, another artform in gameplay design and balance.
Nice to see you get some recognition.
If anyone is interested to relive the sound effect and colour and noise of the 80s arcades, try 3darcade and wander around virtually, pick a machine and launch it in Mame. There were also some models of Vic-20 and C64, Atari, Nes etc.
this is great. To me growing up in the 70s and 80s the sounds and graphics of 8bit are art to me rather than cows cut in half and unmade beds

Galaxian thrum of the wave moving, Galaxian peeshoo missile sound, Pacman startup sound, Jeff Minter's awesome Sonix!
Tempest and Starwars vector graphics.
Your games especially Ten-Ten have that quality of gameplay that is simple to pickup and hard to master, another artform in gameplay design and balance.
Nice to see you get some recognition.
If anyone is interested to relive the sound effect and colour and noise of the 80s arcades, try 3darcade and wander around virtually, pick a machine and launch it in Mame. There were also some models of Vic-20 and C64, Atari, Nes etc.
Vic20-Ian
The best things in life are Vic-20
Upgrade all new gadgets and mobiles to 3583 Bytes Free today! Ready
The best things in life are Vic-20
Upgrade all new gadgets and mobiles to 3583 Bytes Free today! Ready
Materially, I did it myself. Arcade cabinet parts wired to an atari-style 9-pin. I designed and printed the sign for the marquee and just adhered it to some cut glass. Same for the bazel. All photoshop and backlit with a florescent tube light. The monitor is just a CRT with an AV in. A VIC board inside with the megacart to autostart the uIEC with a custom version of the games on SD card. It overheated many times during the opening reception, so I had to restart it a lot. Monday, I'll make updates that give better ventilation.
That is super cool. I'd love to see some video and better photos. Do you think that's possible? I really want to see the marquee properly.
Also, do you intend to keep the cab once the exhibit has ended? It would look lovely in any living room...
You, sir, are a proper genius. Your games are works of art, your forum is the nexus for all Vic activity and now you've made a public-play Vic arcade machine! *Applauds...*
Also, do you intend to keep the cab once the exhibit has ended? It would look lovely in any living room...

You, sir, are a proper genius. Your games are works of art, your forum is the nexus for all Vic activity and now you've made a public-play Vic arcade machine! *Applauds...*
One word - Amazing!!!!Jeff-20 wrote:Materially, I did it myself. Arcade cabinet parts wired to an atari-style 9-pin. I designed and printed the sign for the marquee and just adhered it to some cut glass. Same for the bazel. All photoshop and backlit with a florescent tube light. The monitor is just a CRT with an AV in. A VIC board inside with the megacart to autostart the uIEC with a custom version of the games on SD card. It overheated many times during the opening reception, so I had to restart it a lot. Monday, I'll make updates that give better ventilation.
Android Tablet running Frodo 64 emulator running VIC 20 emulator....
Great Stuff!!!Jeff-20 wrote:Materially, I did it myself. Arcade cabinet parts wired to an atari-style 9-pin. I designed and printed the sign for the marquee and just adhered it to some cut glass. Same for the bazel. All photoshop and backlit with a florescent tube light. The monitor is just a CRT with an AV in. A VIC board inside with the megacart to autostart the uIEC with a custom version of the games on SD card. It overheated many times during the opening reception, so I had to restart it a lot. Monday, I'll make updates that give better ventilation.
Android Tablet running Frodo 64 emulator running VIC 20 emulator....
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...Jeff-20 wrote:I've been having some success putting my games in galleries recently. Thanks to 6502dude and nbla000's advice, I now have a running game exhibit that the curators can activate themselves.
I'm honored for my little contribute to this fantastic project !Jeff-20 wrote:A VIC board inside with the megacart to autostart the uIEC with a custom version of the games on SD card.
I'm releasing a new generic "MC-BOOT" program to autostart from VIC+Mega-Cart+Drive everything that anyone wants to "expose" in case somebody else wants to release another Vic-Cabinet.

Mega-Cart: the cartridge you plug in once and for all.