Konami: Difference between revisions

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=== System 573 Digital ===
=== System 573 Digital ===
* Many, many games including all '''DDR'''s from '''3rd Mix''' onwards.
* Many, many games including all '''DDR'''s from '''3rd Mix''' onwards (excluding '''Super Nova''', which runs on a PlayStation 2 in a cabinet.  Literally).


There's a minor litany here: there's a newer BIOS we don't have dumped yet (it boots with a faux-GUI instead of the traditional Konami text-only POST), there's the digital audio board which decodes and plays the music (in a currently un-understood format), there's a newer protection cartridge using a microcontroller, and the input processing is also believed to be different.
There's a minor litany here: there's a newer BIOS we don't have dumped yet (it boots with a faux-GUI instead of the traditional Konami text-only POST), there's the digital audio board which decodes and plays the music (in a currently un-understood format), there's a newer protection cartridge using a microcontroller, and the input processing is also believed to be different.

Revision as of 14:23, 13 February 2007

GX Type 1

  • Racing Force
  • Konami's Open Golf Championship

Both of these games use a special ROZ layer generated by the "PSAC4" custom IC which appears to include a height map.

GX Type 2

  • Fantastic Journey

This game (the export version of Gokujou Parodius) uses a protection chip to write to the palette.

GX Type 3

  • Soccer Superstars

This game would probably work if the video emulation were simply sorted out a bit more.

GX Type 4

  • Run and Gun 2
  • Rushing Heroes
  • Versus Net Soccer

Each of these games has a Xilinx custom IC (different per game) which primarily acts as a DMA controller, copying things all around work RAM and into the palette and sprite RAM. However, the format of it's operation list is not understood (see the comments in src/mame/drivers/konamigx.c for more details).

System 573 Digital

  • Many, many games including all DDRs from 3rd Mix onwards (excluding Super Nova, which runs on a PlayStation 2 in a cabinet. Literally).

There's a minor litany here: there's a newer BIOS we don't have dumped yet (it boots with a faux-GUI instead of the traditional Konami text-only POST), there's the digital audio board which decodes and plays the music (in a currently un-understood format), there's a newer protection cartridge using a microcontroller, and the input processing is also believed to be different.