The current URL is datacrystal.tcrf.net.
PC-9801: Difference between revisions
Tcaudilllg (talk | contribs) mNo edit summary |
Tcaudilllg (talk | contribs) mNo edit summary |
||
Line 6: | Line 6: | ||
[http://bespin.org/~qz/pc-gpe/|PC Game Programmers Encyclopaedia] | [http://bespin.org/~qz/pc-gpe/|PC Game Programmers Encyclopaedia] | ||
[[Category:Consoles]] |
Revision as of 00:54, 15 September 2016
The PC-9801 (often simply called "PC-98") was an IBM-compatible personal computer released by NEC in 1985.
The PC-9801 is a genuine Wintel PC, making use of MS-DOS and Windows 3.x (and eventually 95). As such, old MS-DOS manuals and PC hardware references are applicable to it, particularly regarding the functioning of the mouse, video, sound devices, and BIOS. It was the system which, more than any other, liberated the Japanese gaming industry. RPG Maker got its start here, as well as several other maker kits. It inherited the PC-8801's reputation for mature content, with more than 500 eroge projects being published during its production run. The PC-98 developed a reputation for independent RPGs, which flourished thanks to the availability of dial-up modem and the rise of pre-internet private networks called "bulletin board systems" (BBS). By the early 1990s, the PC-98 was ubiquitous... even Sailor Moon owned one.