UK University Making Universal Game Emulator
Techradar reports that researchers at the University of Portsmouth in England are working on a project to create a game emulator that will "recognise and play all types of videogames and computer files from the 1970s through to the present day." One of the major goals of the project is to preserve software from early in the computer age. David Anderson of the Humanities Computing Group said, "Early hardware, like games consoles and computers, are already found in museums. But if you can't show visitors what they did, by playing the software on them, it would be much the same as putting musical instruments on display but throwing away all the music. ... Games particularly tend not to be archived because they are seen as disposable, pulp cultural artefacts, but they represent a really important part of our recent cultural history. Games are one of the biggest media formats on the planet and we must preserve them for future generations."
Sometimes, I'm still blown away by the music in early 1990s LucasArts and Sierra games.
Monkey Island 1 and 2 ... and so on.
Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis
Leisure Suit Larry 5
They're making music sound good on a Yamaha OPL3 FM chip.
Good luck trying to beat the various forms of DRM through an emulator (without using a crack).
Also DirectX is also a bitch, specially the earlier versions (4-6) have various compatibility issues.
MESS has really crappy support for a lot of games, it was a great idea but quite a let down from my experience.
You can't take the sky from me.