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Forum Index : Microcontroller and PC projects : Mini Micro Fantasy Computer

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RetroJoe

Senior Member

Joined: 06/08/2020
Location: Canada
Posts: 290
Posted: 09:14pm 17 Dec 2022
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Hey, everyone. It's been a while since I posted anything, but I do check in from time to time to see what's cooking in the Shed :)

I recently came across this project that I found very intriguing, and that should appeal to the "retro computing" community here (i.e. as distinct from the core microcontroller one).

I came across this project somewhat accidentally, when I stumbled into a whole new computing hobbyist sub-genre called "fantasy consoles". These are rendered entirely in software and have the (very limited) specs of early game consoles (think Atari VCS, et al). The most popular projects appear to be Pico-8 and TIC-80.

In the same vein, but moving up the sophistication spectrum quite a bit, this post is about a fantasy computer called Mini Micro, and it uses a Pythonic language called MiniScript.

I've been playing with it for a few days, and it has a very similar vibe to that of MMBasic on the CMM2 e.g. it has a console mode with rudimentary file system and DOS commands, an editor mode (shown below), software sprites, music and sound capabilities, etc.

The only limitation I can see is it was developed with the Unity platform, so there's a 32MB or so Unity runtime that it needs to run, and the actual Unity project source files are proprietary (that won't be a problem for me - everytime I try to dabble in Unity I get a headache that lasts for several days :)

Also, it is zippy enough on my i7 machine to play rudimentary games, but I don't think it is anywhere near the blistering speed of my CMM2.

In any case, hope you have a chance to take a look and share your thoughts - it feels like a nice little retro computing "gem" worth exploring!

Wishing everyone at TBS happy holidays!

Edited 2022-12-18 07:16 by RetroJoe
Enjoy Every Sandwich / Joe P.
 
JohnS
Guru

Joined: 18/11/2011
Location: United Kingdom
Posts: 4147
Posted: 02:30pm 18 Dec 2022
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If you run it on an i7 maybe use MMB4W instead. Very CMM2-like.

John
 
toml_12953
Guru

Joined: 13/02/2015
Location: United States
Posts: 488
Posted: 11:36am 19 Dec 2022
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  RetroJoe said  Hey, everyone. It's been a while since I posted anything, but I do check in from time to time to see what's cooking in the Shed :)

I recently came across this project that I found very intriguing, and that should appeal to the "retro computing" community here (i.e. as distinct from the core microcontroller one).



If it ran on tiny hardware, I'd give it a try. On a PC, real Python will do just fine and it's portable.
 
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