That would have been useful but no, there wasn't. Commodore was fractured and those responsible for the Amiga were desperately trying to distance themselves from the "toys" (read the Commodore 64.) Those same people felt it necessary to provide 'IBM' compatibility which resulted in the Transformer which was a 5.25" floppy disk drive (model A1020) along with emulation software and later with the hardware solution called The Sidecar which was an entire IBM PC/XT that connected to the Zorro expansion port on the side of the Amiga A1000.ral-clan wrote:I think there was a Commodore 64 emulator produced by Commodore for the Amiga 1000.
The first Commodore 64 emulator for the Amiga was software and was released by a company called ReadySoft (located just north of Toronto actually). The software really wasn't very good though.