Not necessarily true. You can get around those timing issues in a number of ways--Bret Johnson's Slowdown is one solution on a pure DOS machine. Another is Dosbox, which I use despite having a Windows 98 machine, because it provides additional benefits (being able to emulate a tandy, for example, allows Pool of Radiance and various other games such as Thexder to have better sound effects and music).blackoak wrote:That's not the one (did I imagine the whole thing? haha), but he does have active ebay sales. Unfortunately they're for more powerful chips, and I've read that for older 2d games you want to avoid anything past Pentium 1 because of CPU timing issues.
Awhile ago I built my own oldschool gaming PC, which I call Mazinkaiser. It's specs:
* 700mhz AMD K6 chip (this will provide a problem if I ever want to play Wrath of Earth because that game uses a feature specific to Intel chips, but Dosbox may be able to get around that, or if it can't, whatever).
* 512mb of RAM
* video card: Voodoo 3 2000 (Voodoo 3 supports all major video acceleration models popular at the time, including Glide, whereas most only support Direct3D and OpenGL, and some older ones support Glide but not OpenGL)
* Soundcard: Soundblaster 16 in an ISA slot (this is important because PCI slot sound cards are a pain to get working in DOS)
* a case that is built for venting and cooling because overheating was the single biggest problem all my old gaming computers had.
Mazinkaiser so far has been able to play every game I ran on it unless the game itself was glitched or was from a rotten source (like a degraded floppy). If you wanna see the machine, complete with naming every component, here (the white machine you see at the beginning I just call "the old white box," but sometimes I retroactively dub it "Mazinger")
EDIT: Saw you asked about Dosbox. Really the only "complication" about it is needing to create a new config file for virtually every game (or series of games) you own, and even then that's not so hard. I often just copy-paste configs, edit then rename the copy, then copy-paste the shortcut that loads a config and change the command line so it loads a different one.
One thing though: on Windows 7 on up, you want to create C:\DOSBOXCONF directories and link to those. By default Dosbox on Windows 7 puts confs in some retardedly long series of subdirectories which no human being can ever remember, so you wanna change that fast even for just the bare-bones default one.