The PicoGUS continues to be the Swiss Army Knife for retro PC gamers.
A quick run down, PicoGUS is an open source hardware project using a RP2040 chip on a ISA card. It's original purpose was to recreate the Gravis Ultrasound sound card which are $300-$1,000 on eBay. However it's on the fly re-programmability has allowed it to keep having new features added.
Feature Rundown
There have been other software solutions for mounting CD images on PCs. But a way to playback CD audio under pure DOS has already remained an issue. And other ODE devices are far more expensive. While an assembled PicoGUS runs $50 in the US with the regular European markups of 58 pounds or 65 Euro.
A quick run down, PicoGUS is an open source hardware project using a RP2040 chip on a ISA card. It's original purpose was to recreate the Gravis Ultrasound sound card which are $300-$1,000 on eBay. However it's on the fly re-programmability has allowed it to keep having new features added.
Feature Rundown
- Gravis Ultrasound
- Sound Blaster 2.0
- Adlib (OPL2)
- Tandy 3-voice
- CMS/Game Blaster
- Intelligent Mode MPU401 with internal wavetable daughter board connector and external MIDI device support
- USB Mouse as serial mouse
- USB Joystick/Gamepad as old school PC joystick
- And NOW Panasonic/MKE CD-ROM ODE that supports CD Audio
There have been other software solutions for mounting CD images on PCs. But a way to playback CD audio under pure DOS has already remained an issue. And other ODE devices are far more expensive. While an assembled PicoGUS runs $50 in the US with the regular European markups of 58 pounds or 65 Euro.