Hello Guys!! Gettin' Old has its advantages, and one of them is to relive an amazing past, using tools of the future. Love retrogaming, emulation, computers, and pixels. Thanks for the follow
How Super Mario World looked in 1989.
This version uses official graphics that were found in the ROM, along with images from the 1989 teaser, and it is fully playable.
The game that I missed the most when I moved from the Atari2600 to the MSX was @Activision’s Seaquest, by the amazing Steve Cartwright.
This is a WIP screenshot of my personal project to port it to MSX and perhaps enter the @MSXdevContest (who knows?!?).
Let’s see!!!
To celebrate #MaySiXth, I created a remake for the MSX1 game “Alcatraz - Impossible Scape”
Originally designed by Wilson Fazzio Martins, released in 1987, by Disprosoft it features some cool things like graphics, logic and adventure.
Bilingual! Enjoy!
moneyou.com.br/alcatraz/
Welcome to MSX DAY 2026!
Take a beautiful shot of your beloved #MSX computer and post it anywhere on the socials. Give it the tag #MaySiXth so everyone can easily find each other's pics all over the world, across all time zones! Let’s make this a global celebration!
Today is MSX Day (MaySiXth)! Post a photo of your MSX and tag it with:
Hoy es el Día del MSX (MaySiXth). Publica una foto de tu MSX y etiquétala con:
今日はMSXの日(MaySiXth)です!あなたのMSXの写真を投稿し、タグ付けしてください:
#MaySiXth#MSX
My oldest and simplest MSX is this National CF-1200, with just 16KB of memory. Even so, MSX1 cartridge games tend to work just fine. For a humble and stark contrast to the high-end FS-A1GT models that tend to appear this day. 🙂 #MaySiXth#MSX
I am deeply saddened to share that my Dear friend Tony Stella has passed away.
My thoughts are with his family during this incredibly difficult time.
At the moment, his family is working to gain access to his business and manage next steps.
I will share news as it becomes available.
Thank you for keeping Tony and his loved ones in your thoughts. ❤️
You know, I think @AdamSandler doesn’t play different characters in different movies.
He’s actually Sam Beckett in a Quantum Leap.
Don’t you all agree?!?
Japanese TV commentators reporting the death of Ayrton Senna on May 1, 1994. You don´t have to understand a single word of the language to see their grief.