The A2000, I think. It had excellent upgrade capability and probably the best compatibility all-around. The A1200 is pretty sweet, though, since it can run all AGA and the best part of the OCS/ECS library.
A1000 for me. Keyboard garage and having to load system roms off a floppy just make the retro experience better. If I could find a way to use adf2disk on that machine I'd be set
Ouch, I would not have thought anyone anyone would have that model at 10. Going to love to hear your reasoning because as you say is all subjective. Did you ever see the John Laws Amiga ad where he points to Mac but calls it a PC?
My first Amiga was the 500 and I agree with that rating against the other Amiga models Still an awesome machine... I believe the Amiga 1000 will make it to his #1 or #2 spot due to its historic precedence.
Re-watching this video I respect your opinion of course but it's not exactly clear why the 500 is the first to "fall" for you. Admittedly, it's the least powerful of the bunch. Is that why you like it least? In my opinion (mind you, however, unfortunately I never owned an Amiga) it is and was a very good machine. A classic! It runs legendary games, has a GUI and much Amiga software is compatible with it even though it was meant as an affordable alternative for the Amiga powerhouses of the time. I think that you can do almost all things Amiga w/ a 500. Save the brilliant games made for the AGA graphics chip from the A1200 of course. But this classic is immensely impressive for an 1987 machine. It might be my fav. because of it being so, well, ... "humble". You could even run MacOS on an A500 to use it for some serious office work in co-operation w/ Apple users. Demonstrated by The 8-Bit Guy: th-cam.com/video/8v4BaWwoyA0/w-d-xo.html
The A2000, I think. It had excellent upgrade capability and probably the best compatibility all-around. The A1200 is pretty sweet, though, since it can run all AGA and the best part of the OCS/ECS library.
Im going to vote for my 3000
Just overall my favorite amiga.
The first true 32-bit PC to be able to access 2 gigabytes of memory continuosly.
Agreed. Another incredible amiga model for sure!
It has to be 1200 for me. With some mid-range accelerator and deflicker.
Agreed. Another incredible amiga model for sure!
@@commodorecave5581 You're keeping tight lips on this. I guess we'll have to watch each release to see!
I only ever had a A600HD, 40mb HDD, ram expansion.
another great amiga model
A1000 for me. Keyboard garage and having to load system roms off a floppy just make the retro experience better. If I could find a way to use adf2disk on that machine I'd be set
Agreed. Another incredible amiga model for sure!
Ouch, I would not have thought anyone anyone would have that model at 10. Going to love to hear your reasoning because as you say is all subjective.
Did you ever see the John Laws Amiga ad where he points to Mac but calls it a PC?
You will have to watch the rest of the series to find out.
My first Amiga was the 500 and I agree with that rating against the other Amiga models
Still an awesome machine...
I believe the Amiga 1000 will make it to his #1 or #2 spot due to its historic precedence.
Agreed. Another incredible amiga model for sure!
*Amiga 4000T, though I never had one*
I'm assuming its compatible enough to play SOTB 1,2,3, Leander and Agony?
Agreed. Another incredible amiga model for sure!
Re-watching this video I respect your opinion of course but it's not exactly clear why the 500 is the first to "fall" for you. Admittedly, it's the least powerful of the bunch. Is that why you like it least?
In my opinion (mind you, however, unfortunately I never owned an Amiga) it is and was a very good machine. A classic! It runs legendary games, has a GUI and much Amiga software is compatible with it even though it was meant as an affordable alternative for the Amiga powerhouses of the time. I think that you can do almost all things Amiga w/ a 500. Save the brilliant games made for the AGA graphics chip from the A1200 of course. But this classic is immensely impressive for an 1987 machine. It might be my fav. because of it being so, well, ... "humble".
You could even run MacOS on an A500 to use it for some serious office work in co-operation w/ Apple users. Demonstrated by The 8-Bit Guy: th-cam.com/video/8v4BaWwoyA0/w-d-xo.html