10 Gig GBA ROM Pack

Huge Collection of GBA Roms, compatible with VisualBoy GBA Emulator. All loose in a Torrent file. Enjoy.

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A Few Changes

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MESS and the TRS-80

MESS


Emulates
TRS-80 (aka) RadioShack Color Computer



The Radio Shack TRS-80 Color Computer (also called Tandy Color Computer, or CoCo) was a home computer launched in 1980. It was one of the earliest, and most successful, of the early generation of personal computers marketed for home use in English-speaking markets. While the model was eventually eclipsed by the onset of the IBM PC clones, enthusiasts have continued to affectionately tinker with the "CoCo" to the present day.
Despite bearing the TRS-80 name, the "Color Computer" was a radical departure from earlier TRS-80 Models - in particular it had a Motorola 6809E processor, rather than the TRS-80's Zilog Z80.
The Motorola 6809E was a very advanced processor, but was correspondingly more expensive than other more popular microprocessors. Competing machines such as the Apple II, Commodore VIC-20, the Commodore 64, the Atari 400, and the Atari 800 were designed around a combination of the much cheaper MOS 6502, itself essentially an enhanced clone of the Motorola 6800, paired with dedicated sound and graphics chips and were much more commercially successful in the 1980s home computer market. Steve Wozniak once commented that the 6502 was 1/4 the price of the Motorola 6800 when the original Apple was being developed in the late 70s. By 1986 prices for 8 bit processors had dropped dramatically from the late 70s, but the MC6809 was still just over twice the price of a MOS6502 (6809/6809E - $5.95; MOS6502 - $2.79).
The Tandy Color Computer line started in 1980 with what is now called the CoCo1 and ended in 1991 with the more powerful yet similar CoCo 3. It was one of the more powerful 8 bit computers of its day and included more standard peripherals than the home computer offerings of other makers, who seemed to rely on peripheral sales to make up for low computer prices. All three CoCo models maintained a very high level of software and hardware compatibility, with few programs written for the older model not running on the newer. The converse cannot be claimed, obviously, due to the greater capabilities of the newer CoCo models. The death knell of the CoCo was the advent of lower cost IBM PC clones (at a time when PC software was abundant and ubiquitous), the same event that spelled the end of other models competing in the home computer market.
The CoCo lacked some of the graphics and sound capabilities of other home computers, but made up for it in computing power and ease of programming in BASIC. Combined with the versatile BASIC, the robust, easy-to-interface-to design has long made it an experimenter's favorite.
[Wikipedia]

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ROMS:

A Mazing World of Malcom Mortar (1987) (26-3160)
ATOM (26-3149)
Androne (1983) (26-3096)
Arkanoid (1987) (26-3043) (Taito)
Art Gallery (26-3061)
Audio Spectrum Analyzer (1981) (26-3156)
Bingo Math (1980) (26-3150)
Bridge Tutor (1982) (26-3158)
Bustout (1981) (26-3056) (Radio Shack)
Canyon Climber (1982) (26-3089)
Castle Guard (1981) (26-3079)
Castle of Tharoggad (1988) (26-3159)
Clowns & Balloons (1982) (26-3087) (RShack-Steve Bjork)
Color Baseball (1980) (26-3095)
Color Computer Controller (1982) (26-3022) (Radio Shack)
Color Cubes (1981) (26-3075)
Color File (1981) (26-3103)
Color Scripsit (1981) (26-3105)
Color Scripsit II (1986) (26-3109)
Deluxe RS-232 Program Pak (1983) (26-2226) (Radio Shack)
Demolition Derby (1984) (26-3044)
Diagnostics (1980) (26-3019)
Dino Wars (1981) (26-3057)
Direct Connect Modem Pak (1985) (26-2228) (Radio Shack)
Doubleback (1982) (26-3091)
Downland (1983) (26-3046)
Dungeons of Daggorath (1982) (26-3093) (DynaMicro)
EDTASM+ (1982) (26-3250)
Facemaker (1984) (26-3166) (Spinnaker)
Football (1980) (26-3053)
Fraction Fever (1984) (26-3169) (Spinnaker)
GFL Championship Football II (1988) (26-3172)
Galactic Attack (1982) (26-3066)
Gin Champion (1982) (26-3083)
Gomoku-Renju (1983) (26-3069) (Intelligent Software Ltd)
Kids on Keys (1984) (26-3167) (Spinnaker)
Kindercomp (1984) (26-3168) (Spinnaker)
Mega-Bug (1982) (26-3076)
Micro Chess (1980) (26-3050)
Micro Painter (1982) (26-3077)
Microbes (1981) (26-3085)
Microworks Forth (1981) (26-xxxx)
Mind-Roll (1988) (26-3100) (EPYX)
Orchestra 90-CC (1984) (26-3143) (Radio Shack)
Personal Finance (1980) (26-3101)
Personal Finance II (1983) (26-3106)
Pinball (1980) (26-3052)
Polaris (1981) (26-3065) (Radio Shack)
Poltergeist (1982) (26-3073)
Popcorn (1981) (26-3090) (Radio Shack - Steve Bjork)
Project Nebula (1981) (26-3063)
Quasar Commander (1980) (26-3051)
Reactoid (1983) (26-3092)
Roman Checkers (1981) (26-3071) (The Image Producers)
Shanghai (1987) (26-3084)
Shooting Gallery (1982) (26-3088) (DataSoft)
Silpheed (1988) (26-3054) (Sierra)
Skiing (1981) (26-3058)
Slay the Nereis (1983) (26-3086)
Soko-Ban (1988) (26-3161) (Spectral Associates)
Space Assault (1981) (26-3060)
Starblaze (1983) (26-3094)
TRS-80 Color Logo (1983) (26-2722)
Temple of ROM (1984) (26-3045) (Rick Adams)
Tennis (1981) (26-3080)
Typing Tutor (1980) (26-3152)
Videotex (1981) (26-2222)
Wildcatting (1982) (26-3067)

Some More Exciting News!

I've now released my first 2 packs of windows classics. Ripped CD Images, they can be mounted or burned, just remember to use Compatibility Mode or they won't work.


40 Pack Windows Games
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40 Pack Windows Puzzle Games
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Very Exciting News!

I have taken the first step of a journey which will take this site to its rightful place on the Internet! I've compiled a small collection of DOS games, with many more to come. And they're all loose, in a torrent file so you can pick and choose which ones you want, without having to worry about download limits. And don't forget an emulator. I use DosBox myself, so that's my first recommendation. I will of course be investigating many more, in hopes of finding the most compatible DOS simulator in the world. Until then Have Fun!


DosBox DOS Emulator:
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DOS Games Torrent:
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Update!
I now have a Torrent of The Even More Incredible Machine
Released by Sierra in 1994
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