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The Atari CoJag is an arcade board released in 1995 by Atari Games (a then-subsidiary of Time Warner Interactive that licensed the console hardware) before Atari Corporation's reverse merger with JT Storage. It was based on the Atari Jaguar chipset. It features nearly identical hardware that doesn't differ from that of the console except for ...
Atari Games licensed the Jaguar's chipset for use in its arcade games. The system, named CoJag (for "Coin-Op Jaguar"), replaced the 68000 with a 68020 or MIPS R3000-based CPU (depending on the board version), added more RAM, a full 64-bit wide ROM bus (Jaguar ROM bus is 32-bit), and optionally a hard drive (some games such as Freeze are ROM
The Atari Jaguar is a fifth generation home video game console developed by Atari Corporation and manufactured by IBM. [1] [2] First released in North America on November 23, 1993, the Jaguar was fifth home console under the Atari name. [3] [4] The following list includes aftermarket post-releases, as well as homebrew games made by the ...
[17] [21] [22] Atari released the game as a launch title in North America on November 23, 1993. [23] A European release followed in June 1994, and Mumin Corporation published the game in Japan on January 13, 1995. [24] [25] In 2008, the hobbyist community Jaguar Sector II released the game's source code in its Jaguar Source Code Collection.
Phase Zero was conceived for the Super NES before Hyper Image decided to work with the Atari Jaguar for their first project due to its hardware. Phase Zero was the first project by Hyper Image Productions, a Maryland-based game developer led by Jeremy Gordon, Matías Duarte, and brothers Otávio Good and Paul Good.
To emulate the Atari ST games, work was done to port these games to the Jaguar as they both share hardware. These ports of the games are originally fan works. [6] Kohler said that without the fanbase for these games archiving and creating fan ports, these games Llamasoft would not be able to keep working as it was just a two-person operation. [6]
The Assassin was part of one of the many projects in development by OMC Games for the Atari Jaguar platform and possibly for other systems, as the company had four more titles planned to be released; a sequel to the game titled Orb Of Bengazi, [1] a medieval fantasy action role-playing game called Age Of Darkness, [7] a cyberpunk title similar ...
The Atari 8-bit computers, formally launched as the Atari Home Computer System, [4] are a series of home computers introduced by Atari, Inc., in 1979 with the Atari 400 and Atari 800. [5] The architecture is designed around the 8-bit MOS Technology 6502 CPU and three custom coprocessors which provide support for sprites , smooth ...