Burn your own Kickstart
With the release of AmigaOS 3.2, we’re looking into how you can burn your own ROMs and what equipment you’ll need.
Retro. For all the right reasons
With the release of AmigaOS 3.2, we’re looking into how you can burn your own ROMs and what equipment you’ll need.
Pure Amiga recently gained a new machine to the collective collection, in the shape of an Amiga 4000. It formed part of a bulk collection made by Phil, and although I’m lucky enough to own one it was still a gap in his retro portfolio so space was made, it all worked first time and that’s the end of this post.
Somewhere deep in every landfill site, an A500+ sits with rotting food waste smeared into the keyboard, many miles away from where it last enjoyed a game of Monkey Island or played a few music modules. Step in, the A500++
The year is 1994, and Pure Amiga is born out of a collision between something old, and something new. In a world where Amiga magazines were all paper, here’s how Pure Amiga broke the mould.