I just watched the Super Mario Bros. -1 World glitch in youtube and I really began wondering about the code behind those games. Which language was used? What about the OS for the video games consoles? Are there any website with resources about this subject? (I am a 90s video gamer so I am particularly interested about the programming behind those games but feel free to make this a wiki and include links to resources about video games programming in general, if you want)
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Having somewhat worked on an emulator for the NES (I have it decoding some opcodes, but none of the other hardware is emulated), I can maybe share a few answers.
As for resources, the NES Dev Wiki has resources concerning the NES hardware, along with programmming references. Zophar's Domain also has technical documents and public domain ROMs for quite a few console (I don't know if I should link to ZD on this site, just google it) | |||
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Most of the older consoles had some kind of BIOS ROM. Some of the source code for these are online: You can read the mostly-commented disassembly to the 7800 BIOS: http://atarihq.com/danb/files/7800bios.asm The Atari 5200's BIOS source is more interesting, since it does more than just initialize the system and display a splash screen: http://atarihq.com/danb/files/5200BIOS.txt The Colecovision had an 8K (!) BIOS ROM as well; it's source is here: http://xi6.com/code/coleco/coleco29.asm The Odyssey II BIOS source is here: http://atarihq.com/danb/files/o2romsrc.txt The Intellivision had an OS called "exec," can't find a disassembly online, though I did find a bunch of info about it: http://www.intellivisiongames.com/bluesky/hardware/intelli_tech.html#exec and http://www.beeslife.com/faq.htm#_Toc140592020 - it had routines to move sprites, read controllers, and calculate square roots! | |||
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Most of the glitches in that video are tile based glitches, where there are bugs in the collision detection of the tile maps that make up the levels. All levels are made up of square shaped tiles. If you notice mario is always between tiles where he shouldn't be. | |||
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I havn't done research about this, but Super Mario Bros and releated 90's games are available as .nes files instead of cartridge and there opensource emulator are also available. AFAIK, these are generally written in C++. I don't know about legality of these nes files and emulator, but they available on internet. you have search with right string! | |||||||
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