Posted March 29, 2012
Crosmando: No, I must apologize, and I must confess my ignorance in the matter, as I only had a vague idea of what the Amiga personal computer was till now, I guess I'm too young to have used one, or too used to Windows-PC gaming.
iainmet: The Amiga did have a console type version, it was the CD32, one of the first optical drive based systems available when the Megadrive (Genesis) and SNES (Super Famicon) were hitting the market hard. The Amiga 500 (With the HUGE half Meg expansion you put in the underside of it!) was quite misleading. The main kickstart screen with the hand and disc did give it the look of a console onscreen, it was literally a minimal boot that was ready to launch a game, program or the workbench. The workbench looked kind of similar to Windows 3.1 with icons and everything in separate windows. Some games had to actually be launched from the workbench, so after booting the workbench disc you then put the game disc in and it would show an icon to launch it in the window for the disc drive.
When you look at an Amiga you will see it has full keyboard and 2 button mouse with 15 pin D-Sub monitor support connector on the back. If you wanted to run it through a TV you had to connect a rather large white block to the D Sub and a lead from the 2 sound ports that merged into one jack and into the side of the white block so you got sound and picture out of a standard antenna socket that TV's have for an aerial input.
The Atari ST was very similar in looks and power as the Amiga. Main difference was when you booted the ST it actually loaded the Atari equivalent of the Amiga Workbench immediately. Then you launched all games from that screen by double clicking the icon. The pointer on the Amiga turned into a sleep bubble when it was working with 2 little zz's in it, the ST the pointer turned into a bee when it was working on something!
That's probably what gave me the "console" impression.