video games gallery from the last century

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P R S T U V X Y Z
S100Bus
SakhrMSX
Salora
SamCoupe
Samsung
Sanyo
SanyoMSX
Schneider
SegaAIComputer
SelcomLemon
Sharp
SharpMZ
SharpX1
SharpX68000
SharpHotbitMSX
SinclairCambrid
SinclairInves
SinclairPC
SinclairQL
SinclairURSS
SinclairZX8
SinclairZXSpect
SonyClie
SonyHitBit
SonySMC
Sord
SovietBlockComp
SpectravideoMSX
SpectravideoSVI
Suncom
SunMicrosystems
Sureshot
Systema


IBM-PC

    Computers:31 ( :29 Games:112 :10 )    Art


3M Ergonomic Mouse EM500GPL

Mouse 2008

Color Graphics Adapter CGA

1981


The Color Graphics Adapter (CGA), originally also called the Color/Graphics Adapter or IBM Color/Graphics Monitor Adapter, introduced in 1981, was IBMs first color graphics card for the IBM PC and established a de facto computer display standard.

Copy II PC Option Board

Device Backup

Cybermaxx


Corría el año 1994 cuando el Cybermaxx de Victormaxx llegó al mercado con soporte para PC y dos lentes de 0.7 pulgadas con una resolución de 505x230 pixeles. Sólo un año después, el Cybermaxx 2 impresionaba a las masas asistentes a la Expo de Entretenimiento Electrónico (E3) con una resolución mayor y soporte para VCR y consolas, no sólo para PC.

Enhanced Graphics Adapter

1984


The Enhanced Graphics Adapter (EGA) is an IBM PC graphics adapter and de facto computer display standard from 1984 that superseded the CGA standard introduced with the original IBM PC, and was itself superseded by the VGA standard in 1987.
In addition to the original EGA card manufactured by IBM, many compatible third-party cards were manufactured, and EGA graphics modes continued to be supported by VGA and later standards.

Extended Graphics Array XGA

1990


he Extended Graphics Array (XGA) is an IBM display standard introduced in 1990. Later it became the most common appellation of the 1024 × 768 pixels display resolution, but the official definition is broader than that.

The initial version of XGA expanded upon IBMs older VGA by adding support for four new screen modes, including one new resolution:

640 × 480 pixels in direct 16 bits-per-pixel (65,536 color) RGB hi-color and 8 bit/px (256 color) palette-indexed mode.
1024 × 768 pixels with a 16- or 256-color (4 or 8 bit/px) palette, using a low frequency interlaced refresh rate.
XGA-2 added a 24-bit DAC, but this was used only to extend the available master palette in 256-color mode, e.g. to allow true 256-greyscale output. Other improvements included the provision of the previously missing 800 × 600 resolution in up to 65,536 colors, faster screen refresh rates in all modes (including non-interlace, flicker-free output for 1024 × 768), and improved accelerator performance and versatility.

All standard XGA modes have a 4:3 aspect ratio with square pixels, although this does not hold for certain standard VGA and third-party extended modes (640 × 400, 1280 × 1024).implement.

Forte VFX1


The Forte VFX1 was a consumer-level head-mounted display marketed during the mid-1990s. It comprised a helmet, a handheld controller, and an ISA interface board, and offered head tracking, stereoscopic 3D, and stereo audio.

Hercules Graphics Card

1982


The Hercules Graphics Card (HGC) is a computer graphics controller formerly made by Hercules Computer Technology, Inc. that combines IBMs text-only MDA display standard with a bitmapped graphics mode. This allows the HGC to offer both high-quality text and graphics from a single card.

The HGC was very popular, and became a widely supported de facto display standard on IBM PC compatibles. The HGC standard was used long after more technically capable systems had entered the market, especially on dual-monitor setups.

IBM PS1 Joystick

Joystick

IBM Pc Jr Joystick

Joystick

IBM Thinkpad 730T Port Replicator

IGrip Ergonomic Keyboard And Trackball

Trackball

Kensington Expert Mouse 5

Trackball

Mitac Joy-100

Joystick

Monochrome Display Adapter MDA

1981


The Monochrome Display Adapter (MDA, also MDA card, Monochrome Display and Printer Adapter, MDPA) is IBMs standard video display card and computer display standard for the IBM PC introduced in 1981.
The MDA does not have any pixel-addressable graphics modes, only a single monochrome text mode which can display 80 columns by 25 lines of high resolution text characters or symbols useful for drawing forms.

Nvidia 3D Vision

Philips Virtual Pinball

Rare Controller


Un mastodonte para ciertos juegos de pinball.

Portable Finger Mouse

Mouse

Raildriver Train Cab Controller

Throttle quadrant

Saitek Pro Flight Switch Panel

Throttle quadrant

Saitek Pro Flight Throttle Quadrant

Throttle quadrant

Saitek Pro Flight Yoke System

Yoke

Sentinel

Antipiracy Dongle

Tarjeta Perforada - Punch Card


En los primeros 3 meses de 1939, IBM vendió 700.000 tarjetas perforadas al bando sublevado de Francisco Franco.
En 1946, International Business Machine Corporation, de Nueva York, hace donación de 109.000 pesetas para su reparto entre las clases más necesitadas. 50.000 de esas pesetas iban a parar directamente a manos de Franco.


En los primeros 3 meses de 1939, IBM vendió 700.000 tarjetas perforadas al bando sublevado de Francisco Franco.

 Tarjeta perforada IBM S.A.E. 8035 del año 1964 aproximadamente, de 80 columnas y 12 puntos de localización, con medidas 187,3 x 82,5 mm de papel rígido.

IBM punch card S.A.E. 8035 of 1964 approximately 80 columns and 12 locate points, measuring 187.3 x 82.5 mm of stiff paper.

Texas Instruments Graphics Architecture Software Development Board TMS34020

1988


 ISA 16-bit

The Lipstick Plus

Rare Controller

Tripp Lite Command Console

Video Graphics Array VGA

1987


Video Graphics Array (VGA) is a video display controller and accompanying de facto graphics standard, first introduced with the IBM PS/2 line of computers in 1987, which became ubiquitous in the IBM PC compatible industry within three years.
The term can now refer to the computer display standard, the 15-pin D-subminiature VGA connector, or the 640×480 resolution characteristic of the VGA hardware.

VGA was the last IBM graphics standard to which the majority of IBM PC compatible computer manufacturers conformed, making it the lowest common denominator that virtually all post-1990 PC graphics hardware can be expected to implement.

X-Arcade Tankstick

Trackball