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PhilsComputerLab: Building the 3 in 1 DOS Retro Gaming PC: 386 486 and Pentium

In this video I am building the 3 in 1 DOS Retro Gaming PC. Based around an Intel Pentium running at 133 MHz and slowing it down by disabling caches, we can play games from the 386, 486 and Pentium era.

Games that run well on a 386, but too fast on later machines are for example Wing Commander and Test Drive 3. Some game run too slow on a 386, but too fast on a Pentium, Theme Park is such a game. Here we put the machine into 486 mode.

And finally, at full speed we can play Doom 2, Wing Commander 3 and System Shock at 640 x 480.

I am showing the entire process of building the machine, partitioning and formatting the hard drive.

You can download my MS-DOS starter pack which gets up and running in no time with working mouse, CD-ROM and boot menu for memory options.

I am also showing you how to install the Sound Blaster drivers, configure the mixer, route the PC speaker through the Sound Blaster and how you can use Reverb, Chorus and 3D Stereo Enhancement to bring new life to FM sounds.

♦Additions / Corrections♦

I totally forgot to record how you change the interrupt from 5 to 7. What you do is go to C:\CTCM and run CTCU. At the screen with the resources, change the configuration profile from 0 to 1. Now you can change the resources manually!
Another great video, Phil! Thanks! ;D
Uh, can I be a little picky? If so, how many pcs do you currently have?
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vicklemos: Uh, can I be a little picky? If so, how many pcs do you currently have?
Actually not that many! These PCs don't live long, I take them apart, put the parts away and work on the next project. But I do have a lot of storage boxes with computer parts :D
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PhilsComputerLab: Building the 3 in 1 DOS Retro Gaming PC: 386 486 and Pentium

In this video I am building the 3 in 1 DOS Retro Gaming PC. Based around an Intel Pentium running at 133 MHz and slowing it down by disabling caches, we can play games from the 386, 486 and Pentium era.

Games that run well on a 386, but too fast on later machines are for example Wing Commander and Test Drive 3. Some game run too slow on a 386, but too fast on a Pentium, Theme Park is such a game. Here we put the machine into 486 mode.

And finally, at full speed we can play Doom 2, Wing Commander 3 and System Shock at 640 x 480.

I am showing the entire process of building the machine, partitioning and formatting the hard drive.

You can download my MS-DOS starter pack which gets up and running in no time with working mouse, CD-ROM and boot menu for memory options.

I am also showing you how to install the Sound Blaster drivers, configure the mixer, route the PC speaker through the Sound Blaster and how you can use Reverb, Chorus and 3D Stereo Enhancement to bring new life to FM sounds.

♦Additions / Corrections♦

I totally forgot to record how you change the interrupt from 5 to 7. What you do is go to C:\CTCM and run CTCU. At the screen with the resources, change the configuration profile from 0 to 1. Now you can change the resources manually!
Great video, great YouTube channel! Keep it up!
Thanks man!
3dfx Voodoo 5 5500 Retro Gaming on a budget

You built a high performance Windows 98 machine based around a Pentium 4, Athlon XP or Athlon 64. Direct3D and OpenGL games ran flawless, the machine delivers impressive frame rates. A Aureal Vortex 2 card gives you A3D surround sound over headphones.

But something is missing...

In this video we will be using a glide wrapper to add 3dfx glide compatibility to such a machine. Play Unreal at 1600 x 1200 at frame rates beyond what a 3dfx Voodoo 5 can do.

I explain how to install the software, there are some benchmark results and some Unreal gaming footage at 1600 x 1200.

The machine used in this video running Unreal is using a socket 754 motherboard, Athlon 64 processor, 512 MB of memory and a GeForce FX 5950 Ultra AGP graphics card. For sound I used an Aureal Vortex 2 sound card because Unreal has really nice A3D sound support.

Enjoy this video and see you next week!
Post edited May 03, 2016 by PhilsComputerLab
Matrox G400 MAX Retro Review

Retro 3D graphics awesomeness from Canada! I feel that the Matrox G400 MAX is Matrox's best 3D graphics cards, so join me in this video and let's take a look at what this card can do!

I put together a Pentium III setup based on an AOpen Slot 1 motherboard, a Intel Pentium III 1 GHz, 256 MB of memory, a 80 GB hard drive, optical disc drive and an Aural Vortex 2 sound card.

New in this video is the optical output which I'm using to record the audio digitally and it sounds very clear. I am using Windows 98 SE of course and in terms of benchmarks I used:

3DMark99 Max
3DMark2000
3DMark2001 SE
Earth 2150
Expendable
Drakan
Quake II
Quake III Arena
MDK 2

In the video I will talk about the drivers and check out the Matrox Technical Support Tweak Utility for overclocking. We will look at controlling v-sync, check out the dual head output, look at performance and also DOS compatibility. Environment Mapped Bump Mapping is also shown.

To finish the video off I am playing Expendable with the EMBM patch.

Enjoy this video!