
Press F12 to capture / release the mouse cursor during emulation. For Chaos Strikes Back, click on the menu "FDD0", and select the file "ChaosStrikesBackX68000.hdm".Then click on the menu "FDD0", and select the file "DungeonMasterX6800030.hdm" For dungeon Master, click on the menu "FDD1", and select the file "DungeonMasterX6800030Savedisk.hdm".Decompress WinX68K, the game and the ROM in the same folder on your hard drive.On the X68000 Emulators & System Files at the Japanese Computer Emulation Centre, download the X68000 CG and IPL ROM files found under the "X68000 system images" section.Download Win68K (high speed version), an X68000 emulator for Windows.Download Dungeon Master for X68000 or Chaos Strikes Back for X68000.I would like to know more about that system, and I do see you know a good deal about it. If you ask me, Daimakaimura and Akumajo Dracula alone more than make up for the lack of a Splatterhouse game, and any of the Twinbee/Gradius (Gradius 2!) games on the 圆8K make me worry little that I picked a system that can't play the Fujitsu Micro's Raiden. If you could do that, though, it should be simple to use it with an emulator.įM Towns and Neo Geo weren't the only systems with perfect arcade ports, once again.there's always the 圆8000 for Capcom, Konami, and even a couple Sega games on there.

X68000.no way anybody but a dedicated hardware geek could get a 3.5 floppy to work on your computer. I've never seen a consumer MSX console with a disk drive built in, so start looking for a complete set. Basically, you need to find a disk drive to get a complete setup. I don't know a lot about what's on disk for this one-Undead Line, for sure a bunch of less known games, and possibly Record of Lodoss war (not sure if that's cart or disk). You can play Konami's strange (though good) ports of Akumajo Dracula and Contra (sans scrolling, due to the lack of a special chip in the Famicom), an port of Snatcher (I say a port because some people say the MSX 2 version is pretty substandard for what it should have been, and it has some bugs compared to the PC-9801 version). MSX games on tape? Sure, there were probably a bunch of em, just like on the old NEC PC-6001 or the other old computers of the early 80s.but most MSX games for sale tend to be either floppy (3.5) or cartridge.
