This and Doom release killed off the Amiga literally overnight. All the BBSes went down and came back up as PC. It was sad to see as the community the Amiga had never was realized on the PC. The sales of Gravis Ultrasounds went through the roof.
The music that this man wrote on a tracker blows my mind! it is actually unbelievable especially given the age of the composer at that stage... absolute pure genius!
@Fernando He didn't earn ANYthing. Or he did earn NOthing. But not a mix of all that ;) Demo making was not about making money. It was about fame and the pure pleasure of spending a few intense hours/days of pure creation with passionate people.
Jonne Valtonen (Purple Motion) still making music score for games (i think now for Paradox games). This is his most legendary track I think. As a hardcore Comodorre Amiga fan, I must admit, when I first saw it in 1993 on PC 486SX I know it was end of Amiga hegemony.
For reference, _Second Reality_ is only a few months younger than _Desert Dream_ , one of the best Amiga demos ever. In 1993, the "CPU inflation", where we got twice the speed every year, had just started, and still if you compare the 3d power of DD and SR, the latter is drawing circles around the former. By now, we have a C64 and an Atari ST conversion of Second Reality - but the most interesting two targets are still missing. I'd really like to see a low-spec PC conversion (16-MHz 286?) and one for the Amiga 500. BTW, the file is called *2nd_PM.S3M* and still the top download of all time on many demomusic archives. VLC can play it, as well as "normal" MOD files and even SID files (C64).
It run on my 386 DX 40 MHz with Tseng VGA 1024 flawlessly. OK there where some lags in the 3D-part in the end (not shown here). My friend who was studying informatics alway bothered me also to buy an 486 DX. I never had one, the next CPU was AMD K7 with Geforce.
I learned about him from REturn to Wonderland. Plyed tens of thousands of hours of it as a kid. Makes me really happy to see people know who he is. He told me he had a fun time working on wonderland, too, so I'm glad he remembers too!
@@V3ntilator Amiga 500 ex-owner clocking in Sir 7. I'm getting all nostalgic and I keep on telling my step son (he is in his 30's by the way) that programmers are so slopy nowadays with all the Gigabytes and Megahertz and that "when I was a young man, starting out with an Aquarius computer that had 1Kb - which I upgraded to 4Kb) and that he is lucky and that I had never had it so good. I was grateful with what I had. With games taking 30 minutes to load from tape and the tape often getting chewed up in the tape player compared to practically instant loading games nowadays. I was grateful. And I hold no grudge!!!!!! Then I got an Amiga 500. With 4096 COLOURS!!!!! The Atari ST could only manage 512 Hahahaha. Deluxe Paint III - Tutankhamun! Damn it!!!!!!! The Demo Scene rocked !!!!!!!!!!
_Get down_ and _PANIC!_ are #2 and #3 then? The latter is from another Future Crew demo called PANIC! And in the original, all those sounds were in good sync. This video has sloppy timing: just compare 03:58 and th-cam.com/video/rFv7mHTf0nA/w-d-xo.html with the timing of the "swoooosh" sound (but the latter has some serious video issues . . . oh well)
I remember watching this on my 386dx40 in 1994 and was blown away by this demo. I had this and a rotation of around 5-10 others that I would watch constantly in high school/college, and it was a must to watch it with every hardware upgrade. If I remember right this didn't gain any more speed after upgrading from a 486dx4/100 to an amd 5x86-133 on the same motherboard with the same cards. I made other upgrades from the 386 to a dx2/66 and finally went from 4 to 8mb of ram whwn I moved to the dx4-100. Fun times back then, when a computer upgrade was a big jump in performance every 12-18 months. Now I go 5+ years between upgrades.
At the end of the 90s (I think 1997) we watched the documentary "The Atomic Café" in physics class. When the quote "I'm not an atomic playboy" by William H. P. Blandy came up, a buddy and I knew directly where this sample occurs and had to grin.
Assembly demos were a fever watch back before the internet, my buddy Matt Ayers, assembly programmer made WadEd during that late period of rapid change, became the defactor Doom/2 editor, won awards and he got regular checks from people buying and licensing code, bought a new camero at 16 off his own money, owned a huge ass house in the south east last time i heard before he was 22.. What a time, purple motion was pure legend, best compact coding, best music
@@purplefriction I know crew bring their own speakers (5.1 I believe) - this was very sophisticated at that time - no soundcard had more than 2-3 RCA outputs, even GUS
@@rafalkowalczyk5027 Yeah, I knew about that too, however I never managed to find a testimony from someone that actually witnessed this historical event live. I wish there was video footage of it.
I remember my friend showing this to me on his PC back when it first launched. I was amazed at the Graphics at the time. Quite a few of the 3d graphics started a growth spurt during this time.
We were running a 486 DX2/66 with 8 Mb i think, and a SoundBlaster 16. We played this a lot. I just need to play 1 second and all of my nerdy game buds from back then will recognize it, and drop what they're doing and let it go on high volume. My borther had a ridiculous stereo for the time, i could hear him playing Dune 2 and blowing up tanks (especially the Harkonnen big ones) from about 300 feet down the road :P Our neighbours loved us, i am sure. Oh man, are we missing the bit where you fly through the city ? Ah th-cam.com/video/XezcZVu66QI/w-d-xo.html
I had a 486/DX4 8 MB and it ran smoothly on that as i vaguely recall. Great time. I miss scores from Gatekeeper. They have a little of Skaven here too :-D
@@LeedaDazahs So many great tracks from back then in the form of MODs and S3Ms! Skaven is legendary and I love Purple Motion and Prism as well. Been happy to find many of these old faves on TH-cam.
Purple Motion, the animators, artists, and the rest of the Future Crew, I wonder where they are today. They mist be doing the best they can still. I know Skaven is alright, I’ve come to contact with him a few times. The demoscene period was a great time during the digital 90’s and early 2000’s.
After twelve and a half years, I finally know what song this is. I heard the first minute of this song on some BS autoplay ad for a workout supplement or program in 2009 and recorded it with a microphone held up to my speaker and later used it in one of my videos, but I always thought it was some one-off thing from that advertisement. I definitely never knew it was six minutes long!
Just got a Raspberry Pi with RetroPie, was setting it up and saw you can use a video as a screensaver. I immediately thought of this from the 90's and had to look it up! :)
This was one of the pivotal moment of the Amiga Platform finding its A1 challenger, kudos to Future Crew, I remember every pixel, beat and frequencies like if it was 30 yrs ago. My 1993 PC is in the junk bin, my amigas are still alive and kicking with fresh new caps 😎
I still remember this quite well. It was floating around my dormitory hall when I was in college. I must've played it like 24 times just to enjoy the BRILLIANTLY crafted music alone. I still think that the line "I am not an atomic playboy" must've had some relevance that I totally missed in every way, but it's still pretty funny.
Sadly, audio's desynced... :( consistently through the video, but the changes in video were originally synced to the music - e.g. when the poly sphere is dropping right at the start, it's supposed to hit the chessboard in sync with the beats in the music. still love this song, brings back so many memories
The video is an edit of multiple captures of the demo running on DosBox. I synced the mastered audio with the captured audio from the emulator but it may still be slightly out of sync because emulation sucks. And I also had to use various versions of Dropbox because some parts didn't run properly on some versions. The goal here is to share the mastered audio more than trying to kind of upscale the video :)
Back in the 90's the white strobe that hits with the beat of the moire pattern @1.23 would physically expand the view of my CRT monitor that really sold the synchronisity of the visuals and music, and you just don't get that on LCD. :(
In addition the video is a capture of the demo running in DosBox and I adjusted the size and ratio of each scene for TH-cam so a lots of effects such as overscan didn’t make it.
@@LenweSaralonde No way it could; it's an artifact of the CRT display. No complaint intended! I was just going down amnesia lane, thinking of the good times. :)
WOOOOOW! I haven't seen this in DECADES! I got into the MOD scene in late 1980s on an Atari 130XE I upgraded to 576K mem. In 1990 I built my first PC and dove in on PC. Amiga and Atari ST did some amazing stuff, but I got my hands on what was then a great PC video card and all this stuff just looked astounding. It changed my whole outlook on music and graphics. It's "Primitive" by today's standards where we run incredible realistic graphics real time, but at the time this stuff was mind-blowing. rendering some of these scenes took Many HOURS and days even. How far we have come, eh? I STILL play the old MOD, XM, S3M, IT, etc... turned many into MP3s. Particularly the ones I still have that I made.
thats cool, I take look at it sometimes with nostalgy. I'm not sure when I have that on 3.5" diskette, but I'm not sure if I first run it on 286 or 486DLC - something like 386.
It's a quick and dirty capture of the demo running on DosBox. It would have been better to have a video capture of the demo running on the real hardware but I don't have any retro PC. The intention here is to showcase the music, not the demo part.
@@LenweSaralonde it's still better than the other video, which has severe re-encoding artifacts - worse than usual demo encoding artifacts - caused by TH-cam. On the other hand, I think you desynchronized the audio from the video.
I wonder how they did the squishy ball thing. Is it animated or a simulation? If I am not mistaken this kind of thing is not trivial to do, especially getting it stable
If this were made on the by far weaker Amiga 500 it would be more impressive than it is vs Kefrens Desert Dreams. Without Amiga, this demo would never exist. Yes, i like this demo too of course. Legendary for PC, but not so much vs 1980's on Amiga.
Super ! En plus la qualité de la vidéo est bonne. Juste dommage que tu n'aie pas remasterisé l'ensemble des morceaux ^^ En tout cas merci à toi de faire revivre cette légende !
This is a defining moment in PC history. Never forget it.. :)
For PC, but vs the much weaker Amiga 500. Not that much.
Oh, we never will!
besides the music AMIGA -> Spaceballs - state of the art pwn this in wow factor.
Commodore Amiga and C64. RIP.
This and Doom release killed off the Amiga literally overnight. All the BBSes went down and came back up as PC. It was sad to see as the community the Amiga had never was realized on the PC. The sales of Gravis Ultrasounds went through the roof.
The music that this man wrote on a tracker blows my mind! it is actually unbelievable especially given the age of the composer at that stage... absolute pure genius!
@Fernando He didn't earn ANYthing. Or he did earn NOthing. But not a mix of all that ;)
Demo making was not about making money. It was about fame and the pure pleasure of spending a few intense hours/days of pure creation with passionate people.
@Fernando > didn't earn almost nothing
What
@Fernando nothing but glory and fame.
@@MichaelKrishtopa and becoming Legend
@Fernando-wz6no he went on to develop a sound card ,there's more
30yrs I've been listening to this - THANK YOU!
🤍
Same here and have to say that these guys did awesome code and Jonne Valtonen did Master piece song! 2024 and again playing this ❤
Jonne Valtonen (Purple Motion) still making music score for games (i think now for Paradox games). This is his most legendary track I think. As a hardcore Comodorre Amiga fan, I must admit, when I first saw it in 1993 on PC 486SX I know it was end of Amiga hegemony.
Yup, I love Paula but I was right there with you. Love the Amiga but this is legendary
Amazing sound tracks!! WOW
For reference, _Second Reality_ is only a few months younger than _Desert Dream_ , one of the best Amiga demos ever. In 1993, the "CPU inflation", where we got twice the speed every year, had just started, and still if you compare the 3d power of DD and SR, the latter is drawing circles around the former.
By now, we have a C64 and an Atari ST conversion of Second Reality - but the most interesting two targets are still missing. I'd really like to see a low-spec PC conversion (16-MHz 286?) and one for the Amiga 500.
BTW, the file is called *2nd_PM.S3M* and still the top download of all time on many demomusic archives. VLC can play it, as well as "normal" MOD files and even SID files (C64).
It run on my 386 DX 40 MHz with Tseng VGA 1024 flawlessly. OK there where some lags in the 3D-part in the end (not shown here). My friend who was studying informatics alway bothered me also to buy an 486 DX. I never had one, the next CPU was AMD K7 with Geforce.
I learned about him from REturn to Wonderland. Plyed tens of thousands of hours of it as a kid. Makes me really happy to see people know who he is. He told me he had a fun time working on wonderland, too, so I'm glad he remembers too!
An absolute masterpiece! I was lucky to have lived the PC Demo Scene of the 90's
I am not an atomic playboy! Best sample ever!
I were lucky to have lived the Amiga scene in 1980's ;)
@@V3ntilator Amiga 500 ex-owner clocking in Sir 7. I'm getting all nostalgic and I keep on telling my step son (he is in his 30's by the way) that programmers are so slopy nowadays with all the Gigabytes and Megahertz and that "when I was a young man, starting out with an Aquarius computer that had 1Kb - which I upgraded to 4Kb) and that he is lucky and that I had never had it so good. I was grateful with what I had. With games taking 30 minutes to load from tape and the tape often getting chewed up in the tape player compared to practically instant loading games nowadays. I was grateful. And I hold no grudge!!!!!!
Then I got an Amiga 500. With 4096 COLOURS!!!!! The Atari ST could only manage 512 Hahahaha. Deluxe Paint III - Tutankhamun! Damn it!!!!!!!
The Demo Scene rocked !!!!!!!!!!
_Get down_ and _PANIC!_ are #2 and #3 then? The latter is from another Future Crew demo called PANIC! And in the original, all those sounds were in good sync. This video has sloppy timing: just compare 03:58 and th-cam.com/video/rFv7mHTf0nA/w-d-xo.html with the timing of the "swoooosh" sound (but the latter has some serious video issues . . . oh well)
ten seconds to transmission
@@skumflum7511 sampled from Batman.
Friendly reminder that Jonne Valtonen (aka Purple Motion) was around 16 years old when he composed this for Future Crew.
And Skaven (The composer for the intro & outro of this demo) was around 18 years old as far as I know (before his birthday)
I admire you guys from Future Crew, graphics, music simply insurmountable.
Everytime I watch this IM STILL blown away. LITERALLY every pixel is calculated in real time, using REAL math. No 3D libraries here!
Using shaders before they were cool! :D
I remember watching this on my 386dx40 in 1994 and was blown away by this demo. I had this and a rotation of around 5-10 others that I would watch constantly in high school/college, and it was a must to watch it with every hardware upgrade. If I remember right this didn't gain any more speed after upgrading from a 486dx4/100 to an amd 5x86-133 on the same motherboard with the same cards. I made other upgrades from the 386 to a dx2/66 and finally went from 4 to 8mb of ram whwn I moved to the dx4-100. Fun times back then, when a computer upgrade was a big jump in performance every 12-18 months. Now I go 5+ years between upgrades.
We used to run this non stop at the computer store I worked at. It sold a lot of systems
smart!
At the end of the 90s (I think 1997) we watched the documentary "The Atomic Café" in physics class. When the quote "I'm not an atomic playboy" by William H. P. Blandy came up, a buddy and I knew directly where this sample occurs and had to grin.
Assembly demos were a fever watch back before the internet, my buddy Matt Ayers, assembly programmer made WadEd during that late period of rapid change, became the defactor Doom/2 editor, won awards and he got regular checks from people buying and licensing code, bought a new camero at 16 off his own money, owned a huge ass house in the south east last time i heard before he was 22..
What a time, purple motion was pure legend, best compact coding, best music
My dad was at assembly in the early 90s and witnessed this, so thankful i got exposed to the demo culture aswell.
true privilige, meet FC alive...
did he witness the actual projection of the demo in dolby surround, and with the cheers from the crowd and all? I would love to hear more about this.
@@purplefriction I know crew bring their own speakers (5.1 I believe) - this was very sophisticated at that time - no soundcard had more than 2-3 RCA outputs, even GUS
@@rafalkowalczyk5027 Yeah, I knew about that too, however I never managed to find a testimony from someone that actually witnessed this historical event live. I wish there was video footage of it.
@@purplefriction Yes i believe so. I would have to ask him though.
03:21 : Probably the veryy best music in demo history. I loved it back then, love it today and will love it till the end of days.
Best part, can't stop playing it over and over again.
I was 33 when this was released. I Was programming for over 10 years before this and it still gives me goosebumps.
EPIC¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡ this song is ORGASMIC with Gravis Ultrasound, PURE ART¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡
Do you know has anyone recorded it with Gravis Ultrasound so the rest of us can hear it as well
?
@@knyazhefilms2154 I dont know , soory :( but the song is GREAT¡¡¡
I remember my friend showing this to me on his PC back when it first launched. I was amazed at the Graphics at the time. Quite a few of the 3d graphics started a growth spurt during this time.
I had to upgrade my 486DX/33 to 8 MB (from 4 MB) to get this to play smoothly. What a difference 4 MB makes!
We were running a 486 DX2/66 with 8 Mb i think, and a SoundBlaster 16.
We played this a lot.
I just need to play 1 second and all of my nerdy game buds from back then will recognize it, and drop what they're doing and let it go on high volume.
My borther had a ridiculous stereo for the time, i could hear him playing Dune 2 and blowing up tanks (especially the Harkonnen big ones) from about 300 feet down the road :P
Our neighbours loved us, i am sure.
Oh man, are we missing the bit where you fly through the city ?
Ah
th-cam.com/video/XezcZVu66QI/w-d-xo.html
@@gabiballetje Your neighours? I think you meant the entire neighbourhood :D Awesome! I ran it on a 386DX40 with 4MB, and I ran that demo a LOT!
@@BlackStarEOP All free standing houses, but yeah, about 300 feet away for sure.
I had a 486/DX4 8 MB and it ran smoothly on that as i vaguely recall. Great time. I miss scores from Gatekeeper. They have a little of Skaven here too :-D
@@LeedaDazahs So many great tracks from back then in the form of MODs and S3Ms! Skaven is legendary and I love Purple Motion and Prism as well. Been happy to find many of these old faves on TH-cam.
Miss you so much, Gravis Ultrasound... RIP
So many memories. It felt like it took this forever to download, but it was worth the wait.
Goosebumps all over again.... 🕺🏻
True classic. Remember when my friend Matt called and told me to download it. Blown away. This and Doom are the icons of early 90s PC and BBSs.
Purple Motion, the animators, artists, and the rest of the Future Crew, I wonder where they are today. They mist be doing the best they can still. I know Skaven is alright, I’ve come to contact with him a few times. The demoscene period was a great time during the digital 90’s and early 2000’s.
After twelve and a half years, I finally know what song this is. I heard the first minute of this song on some BS autoplay ad for a workout supplement or program in 2009 and recorded it with a microphone held up to my speaker and later used it in one of my videos, but I always thought it was some one-off thing from that advertisement. I definitely never knew it was six minutes long!
There have been several remakes already; but this remaster edition sounds better than ever. 👍
Just got a Raspberry Pi with RetroPie, was setting it up and saw you can use a video as a screensaver. I immediately thought of this from the 90's and had to look it up! :)
This definitely can live on through Linux and does.
2:06 always made me feel amazing, the music is amazing
This was one of the pivotal moment of the Amiga Platform finding its A1 challenger, kudos to Future Crew, I remember every pixel, beat and frequencies like if it was 30 yrs ago. My 1993 PC is in the junk bin, my amigas are still alive and kicking with fresh new caps 😎
This shit blew me away in like 1995. Was all over the local BBS's
Fuckin ubiquitous.
IMO one of thhe best tracker music videos ever
Doom and this epic demo / soundtrack killed the Amiga for me.. It was a time of mixed emotions...
I found this track in. S3m format in jazz jackrabbit 2 folder in my winxp back 2002.
Its awesome.
Software-driven scale and rotation.
Awesome 😁
BANGER ... GOOD OLD TIMES ! thank you for this !
I was young at these times, and I discovered it a bit later... but it will still have a place in my heart.
When I'm in angst or worry, Purple Motion's music get me back into the reality… second perhaps. 😉
By far the best capture I've seen as well
Ten seconds to transmission...I found the film :)
I still remember this quite well. It was floating around my dormitory hall when I was in college. I must've played it like 24 times just to enjoy the BRILLIANTLY crafted music alone. I still think that the line "I am not an atomic playboy" must've had some relevance that I totally missed in every way, but it's still pretty funny.
best thing I ever downloaded on my 2400Bps modem
respect 4 the master
superbe démo que j'ai connu, et oui j'ai 50 ans grrr, mais très content d'avoir connu tout ça...Pc 4 couleurs, Compatible PC Tandy 1000 EX.....
Great sounding remaster
Sadly, audio's desynced... :( consistently through the video, but the changes in video were originally synced to the music - e.g. when the poly sphere is dropping right at the start, it's supposed to hit the chessboard in sync with the beats in the music. still love this song, brings back so many memories
The video is an edit of multiple captures of the demo running on DosBox. I synced the mastered audio with the captured audio from the emulator but it may still be slightly out of sync because emulation sucks. And I also had to use various versions of Dropbox because some parts didn't run properly on some versions.
The goal here is to share the mastered audio more than trying to kind of upscale the video :)
Legendary Demo.
Back in the 90's the white strobe that hits with the beat of the moire pattern @1.23 would physically expand the view of my CRT monitor that really sold the synchronisity of the visuals and music, and you just don't get that on LCD. :(
In addition the video is a capture of the demo running in DosBox and I adjusted the size and ratio of each scene for TH-cam so a lots of effects such as overscan didn’t make it.
@@LenweSaralonde No way it could; it's an artifact of the CRT display. No complaint intended! I was just going down amnesia lane, thinking of the good times. :)
The most iconic PC demo of 90s
i work with fastracker2 in 1997 great experience- Purple Motion was on the top !!!!!!!!!! thanks
I've got this on a 3.5inch floppy somewhere! :D
keep that shit
The best demo there has ever been.
Amazing... I remember, how I started it from fdd with dos ))) Thanx!
Many zx spectrum coders ried to repit these effects ))))
Thank you Stuart Brown for showing me awesome stuff like this damnn.
WOOOOOW! I haven't seen this in DECADES! I got into the MOD scene in late 1980s on an Atari 130XE I upgraded to 576K mem. In 1990 I built my first PC and dove in on PC. Amiga and Atari ST did some amazing stuff, but I got my hands on what was then a great PC video card and all this stuff just looked astounding. It changed my whole outlook on music and graphics.
It's "Primitive" by today's standards where we run incredible realistic graphics real time, but at the time this stuff was mind-blowing. rendering some of these scenes took Many HOURS and days even.
How far we have come, eh? I STILL play the old MOD, XM, S3M, IT, etc... turned many into MP3s. Particularly the ones I still have that I made.
I did see this on site.. So so so so so so so Cool at that time . Peace- Tomy
Thank you, this sounds brilliant!
God bless you, just wanted to start the Renoise-Tracker import + remastering :) and thx for the download link!
that was times, when there was something like wars between PC and Amiga :-)
Amazing to see all of this be made back in 1993... way before I was even born...
Remember when this landed, this was the bleeding edge
Flashback galore - thanks for this ;)
great soundtrack!
Thanks, Ahoy!
One of my favourite DEMOS, but the one i liked most was Desert Dream by Kefrens.
I can recall it, it was fantastic!
Quite chilling nostalgia effect
thats cool, I take look at it sometimes with nostalgy. I'm not sure when I have that on 3.5" diskette, but I'm not sure if I first run it on 286 or 486DLC - something like 386.
Really good remaster, I love it!
Very very nice work, the music is clearer and I like it even more! Compliments!!! Can you do the same also with the last part (the space ship)?
💖💖 masterpiece!
Fabulous 90s.
Ma che ne sanno i 2000 con le Audi, 500 e i risvoltini. 😄
Me: Pirates have amazing music.
You: Yo ho! Yo ho! What do ya do with a drunken sailor? Lol.
Me:
Had this on my harddrive for 30 years as "Unreal ][ PM" in WinAmp and "2ND_PM.S3M" as filename and never knew the origin.
legendary music!
The best 1996 hungary Cache96 party is win. 2 Gravis soundcard the Wallenberg projektor 1000w. Forewer
I use this to test my headphones
Atomic playboys!
Still rocks
Second Reality = Forever Reality
Back in the day, my 386 crapped itself to run this. Good times...
Anyone know where to find the 'victory' MOD? shit was epic song from same period
Me when I commit corporate sabotage with nuclear weaponry
*"MAKE SQUIDWARD PROUD!!!"*
*"IM A GOOFY GOObErrr!"*
The video has also been remastered, because the older video of this has re-encoding artifacts.
It's a quick and dirty capture of the demo running on DosBox. It would have been better to have a video capture of the demo running on the real hardware but I don't have any retro PC. The intention here is to showcase the music, not the demo part.
@@LenweSaralonde it's still better than the other video, which has severe re-encoding artifacts - worse than usual demo encoding artifacts - caused by TH-cam. On the other hand, I think you desynchronized the audio from the video.
So! Where's the remastered Skaven music? Coz I love that in this demo, too!
3:08 sounds kinda like the synth riff in Billie Eilish's CHIHIRO.
or 5:08
świetne. dzięki
Absolute favourite DemoTune for all time! Thanks for this!
Are you planning to upgrade the other parts of SR, music by Skaven?
eppogabber SR maybe but more classic demo tune masterings will come.
I wonder how they did the squishy ball thing. Is it animated or a simulation? If I am not mistaken this kind of thing is not trivial to do, especially getting it stable
I'm guessing it was a simulation showcasing advanced programming skills.
Who says "Get Down"? Anyone knows the person name? It became a legend in 2 words!
I am not an atomic playboy!
superbe vidéo ! comme d'hab je dirai ^^
"Mistakes were made"
The Future is now the Past. Nearly 30 years when i was a student and ran this demo on my 386DX2/40. And the others were like wtf.
The end is missing :(
This is not the whole demo, only the second song that I remastered. The demo visual is only there for show.
*Если мне память не изменяет, на экране всегда не более 256-и цветов.*
Actually, I >Am< an atomic playboy, Mr. Motion.
If this were made on the by far weaker Amiga 500 it would be more impressive than it is vs Kefrens Desert Dreams. Without Amiga, this demo would never exist. Yes, i like this demo too of course. Legendary for PC, but not so much vs 1980's on Amiga.
E P I C
Super ! En plus la qualité de la vidéo est bonne. Juste dommage que tu n'aie pas remasterisé l'ensemble des morceaux ^^ En tout cas merci à toi de faire revivre cette légende !
Когда увидел эту демку моя жизнь разделилась на до и после
How to run CD ROM demo software in ms dos