Skimaxx

Arcade 1996 Kyle Hodgetts / ICE Sports Skiing
Water-ski simulator.
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Skimaxx

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Technique

CPU
  • maincpu 68EC030 (@ 40 Mhz)
  • subcpu 68EC030 (@ 40 Mhz)
  • tms TMS34010 (@ 50 Mhz)
Chipset
  • OKI6295 (@ 4 Mhz)
  • OKI6295 (@ 2 Mhz)
  • OKI6295 (@ 4 Mhz)
  • OKI6295 (@ 2 Mhz)
Affichage
  • Orientation Yoko
  • Résolution 255 x 240
  • Fréquence 60 Hz
Contrôles
  • Nombre de joueurs 1
  • Nombre de boutons 2
  • Type de contrôle stick

Screenshots de Skimaxx

Skimaxx - Screen 1
Skimaxx - Screen 2
Skimaxx - Screen 3
Skimaxx - Screen 4
Skimaxx - Screen 5

Skimaxx et M.A.M.E.

0.131u1 [Phil Bennett]

Bugs:
- Original PCB running attract mode and a short game through an RGB board and into my PC. Smitdogg (ID 04084)

WIP:
- 0.139u4: 68030 MMU now emulates translation cache; fixed misinterpreted MMU opcodes [R. Belmont].
- 0.135u1: Luca Elia and Phil Bennett fixed Skimaxx - Game now playable. Luca Elia added emulation of background graphics (blitter), sound and inputs to Skimaxx. Replaced the 2x 68020 with 68EC030. Added 4x OKI6295 (4/2/4/2 Mhz). Changed visible area to 640x240, VSync to 60Hz and region gfx to blitter. Fixed oki1/2/3/4 rom loading. Added dipswitches 'Time For Super Course' and 3x 'Unknown'.
- 0.131u1: Phil Bennett added Skimaxx (Kyle Hodgetts/ICE 1996).
- 13th September 2009: Luca Elia - Some WIP screenshots of the water-ski simulator Skimaxx. This game, manufactured by ICE in 1996, featured a dedicated cabinet with an hydraulic board to stand on. Yes... it's another Kyle Hodgetts special. For the emulation, I built upon the current driver by Phil Bennett, adding graphics, inputs and sound: the PCBs use 2 x 68EC030 @ 40MHz and a TMS34010 @ 50MHz, a CPU with dedicated instructions for pixel-level processing and graphics primitives. Since MAME lacks a proper 68030 core, the driver uses two 68020s instead. Not a big deal, since the '030 only adds the MMU (not present in the EC model anyway) and split data and instruction caches over the '020. The first 68k drives the game logic and builds up the display lists for the other CPUs. The TMS draws the text overlay, while the second 68k draws everything else with the help of a blitter. The blitter is an FPGA (programmed at boot by the 68k) that does rotation and zooming, but one line at a time. Thus it requires the CPU to do most of the work, including walking the high-color screen buffer pixel by pixel! The stereo sound is driven by 4 x M6295 (sample players) that output digitized music and speech. Thanks to Phil Bennett, R. Belmont and Mark Frisbie.

Romset: 16384 kb / 22 files / 2.91 zip
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