/picogus

Emulation of ISA sound cards on Raspberry Pi Pico (GUS, SB/Adlib, MPU-401, Tandy, CMS) with USB mouse/joystick support

Primary LanguageCGNU General Public License v2.0GPL-2.0

PicoGUS

PicoGUS Logo

Build Status

ISA sound card emulation on the Raspberry Pi Pico's RP2040 microcontroller. PicoGUS can emulate:

Current status: perpetual beta! See the main wiki page for current status and the compatibility list for support status of various DOS programs and other system compatibility notes. This project has a heavy demoscene focus due to the GUS's history so that's what I've concentrated on, but GUS support in games is very good to excellent.

Want to buy a PicoGUS? Fully assembled PicoGUS 2.0 sound cards are available from these sources, all of whom ship worldwide:

Want to make your own PicoGUS? See the build guide. Note that the more DIY friendly v1.1.1 hardware has some documented issues with reset – a forthcoming v1.2 revision will fix these issues. Important caveat: due to the specs of the Pico, assumptions made by programs written to use the GUS, the imprecise nature of emulation, and the varying specs of retro DOS PC hardware, some things will likely never be perfect. This is still a work in progress.

Have a PicoGUS and want to use it? See the configuring and using your PicoGUS guide.

Want to support PicoGUS? I have a limited number of machines to test PicoGUS in and donating either money or motherboards would be greatly appreciated and help increase the compatibility of PicoGUS.

You can donate via PayPal or Ko-Fi: ko-fi

PicoGUS 2.0 PCB

PicoGUS v1.1 beta PCB

See/hear PicoGUS in action on YouTube:

Videos by others:

My videos:

September 2022 update October 2022 update December 2022 update January 2023 update March 2023 update

Open Source Credits

License

The hardware portions of this repository (hw/ directory) are licensed under the CERN OHL version 2, permissive.

The software portions of this repository (sw/, pgusinit/ directories) as a collection are licensed under the GNU GPL version 2. Some files are individually dual-licensed under BSD or MIT licenses – see the license in the file headers for details.