Category: GP2x
Added Mar 28, 2010, Under:
GP2x
Franxis updated MAM4ALL for GP2x and Wiz. MAME stands for “multiple arcade machine emulator”.
Changes:
– Added volume control to the frontend. Also the default volume is lowered down.
– Fixed memory bug with games containing multiple FM sound systems. This stops some games crashing on exit.
– New option to enable DRZ80 only for the sound CPUs. Improves the compatibility of DRZ80.
It is automatically enabled to gain speed in several games (e.g. several Capcom, Sega and Midway games).
– Several other fixes taken from Slaanesh code (GP32 and Dingoo ports).
– Added new skins from GP32 and Dingoo ports (by Antiriad and Slaanesh).
– Added script to use 64 MB of additional virtual memory (swap file on the SD card).
It will reduce the life of the SD card. Use at your own risk!.
– GP2X: Upper memory is used as primary memory for all memory allocations to avoid lock-ups due to memory management bugs.
Not used for the Neo·Geo executable (to be able to run the heaviest games).
– WIZ: Added support for hardware timer. Not enabled yet (it seems to slow down the emulator a bit).
– Source code clean-up to avoid port definitions in the common part. Also improved makefiles are created.
– Preliminary integration of the ARMNEC core (created by Oopsware). Some games start to run but nothing playable yet. Disabled for now.
http://www.talfi.net/gp32_franxis/
Added Mar 28, 2010, Under:
GP2x
OpenJazz is a free, open-source version of the classic Jazz Jackrabbit games.
http://dl.openhandhelds.org/cgi-bin/gp2x.cgi?0,0,0,0,20,1195
Added Mar 28, 2010, Under:
GP2x
Added Mar 28, 2010, Under:
GP2x
sz81 is a Sinclair ZX80/ZX81 emulator very much based upon the work of Ian Collier’s xz80 and Russell Marks’s z81 but employing the highly portable SDL and including additional functionality and features for desktop computers and portable devices.
http://dl.openhandhelds.org/cgi-bin/gp2x.cgi?0,0,0,0,72,2830
Added Feb 27, 2010, Under:
GP2x
Gmu is a music player for the Dingoo. Gmu supports Ogg Vorbis, MP3, Musepack, FLAC and various module formats (such as s3m, stm, it, etc.). It also includes a playlist and a file browser.
Quote:
Gmu has been around for quite some time now and previous versions of Gmu always have been released as Freeware. Today I release another version of Gmu. It is another beta release of the 0.7.0 series and hopefully the last beta release until the final 0.7.0 release.
Over the past few years, people have frequently asked me if I would release the source code of the Gmu music player, but until today I didn’t. Although I had planned to release Gmu as open source software, I always wanted to make Gmu somewhat feature-complete, first. Now Gmu is very close to such a state. Of course there will always be features worth adding and bugs that need to be fixed, but (in my opinion) it is in a very usable state.
Actually, I had planned to release Version 0.7.0 as Gmu’s first open source release. The reason for doing it earlier with this 0.7.0_BETA8 version, are the guys at sharism.cc who develop open source hardware like the Ben NanoNote which I have mentioned a few posts earlier. They would like to ship those NanoNote devices with Gmu as the device’s music player.
What’s new in this release? Actually not that much considering new features, but there still has been a notable change. I’ve improved Gmu’s theme engine such that it will be possible to use Gmu on devices with screen resolutions other than the good old 320×240 resolution used on the GP2X, Wiz and Dingoo. This is not of much use for those devices but allows for easier porting of Gmu to other devices. Unfortunately, this change also means that you cannot use your old Gmu skins, but it is rather simple to create your own new themes with the new theme engine. Just have a look at the new “default-modern†theme, which comes with this Gmu release.
So here it is. The Gmu Open Source Edition released under the GPLv2 (GNU General Public License version 2). Also, for your convenience, there are binary builds for the GP2X, GP2X Wiz and the Dingoo A320.
When trying to build Gmu please have a look at the BUILD.txt file first. There are important information on how to build Gmu binaries for different targets.
Also, new users should have a look at the README.txt file that comes with every Gmu release.
http://wejp.k.vu/gmu/gmu-0-7-0_beta8-first-gmu-open-source-release
Biniax-2 is a game of logic and reaction. The 3 game modes allow you to play against the time, pure tactical play or challenge with a friend in a multiplayer game.
GAME RULES: The player moves a single element around a field of pairs of elements. You can take a pair if it contains your element. When a pair is taken, player’s element becomes the other element of the taken pair. Sometimes the field is scrolling down (the scrolling elements can push you down) and the goal of the game is to stay as long as possible on the board.
GNU Robbo is a free open source reimplementation of Janusz Pelc’s Robbo for the Atari XE/XL which was distributed by LK Avalon in 1989.
Trap75 is a game like Jezzball, where you need to cover 75% of each level’s space without getting your lines hit by the moving balls.
Worminator is a sidescrolling action game. You play as The Worminator and fight your way through many levels of madness and mayhem.
TUcS is a puzzle/platform game written in GLBasic.