Last modified on 15 May 2011, at 01:44

Direct Disk to Cartridge Port

Revision as of 01:44, 15 May 2011 by Gryzor (Talk | contribs) (Undo revision 68065 by Gryzor (talk))

The practise of some GX4000 cartridge game developers was to put an almost unchanged game from the CPC into a cartridge for the Plus/GX4000.


Disk Vs Cartridge

Sometimes such games had some features removed because the 128KB only cartridge had less capacity compared to a 3" disk (178K with standard DATA format with later disc games used around 210K on each disc, compared to 128KB used for most cartridge games) and in addition there was no way to store game state (i.e. the cartridge contained an EPROM and the ACID protection chip only, no EEPROM or RAM). It is worth noting that 256KB and 512KB (max capacity) can be used with cartridges but most used 128KB ROMs.

Consequences

Of course this practise didn't help the Plus range at all and was almost as shameful as the Speccy Port technique.

It was a cheap and fast way to quickly release games.

Another problem came from the fact that both the 464Plus and GX4000 (essentially a cut down 464Plus) had 64KB ram. As a result using the Plus features to the full was not so simple if the game was to run on these systems. If 128KB ram was the minimum then this would have allowed more flexibility for graphical data, sampled sound etc and would have easily enhanced a 64KB only game.

A 6128PLUS config with 512K ROM cartridge and disk Drive support is the optimum "from the shelf" Amstrad PLUS config, but such beast was never fully unleashed yet.

Almost Direct Disk to Cartridge Port

A good part of the games with CPC and PLUS existing versions are "Almost Direct Disk to Cartridge Port", a "Direct Disk to Cartridge Port" with small modifications. The use of the extra Plus features varied a lot. Some didn't use much, others used more.

List of Direct Disk to Cartridge Ports

Those were at least adapted to the ROM format.

These could have benefited from using the Plus 4096 colour palette as a minimum.

Yet some of those actually had some especially made graphic pages (Tintin on the Moon perhaps) using PLUS palette, or some slight changes in palette.

List of "Almost" Direct Disk to Cartridge Ports

Some other cartridge games looked similar to the CPC version, but did have some enhancements (few visual effect or cinematic/Intro pages).


  • Crazy Cars 2 ( Cartridge ) : sky smooth colourfull gradient or HUD re-coloured... added option such as the map. Upgraded intro page too.
  • Wild Streets ( Cartridge ) : mostly re-colouring to fit the better PLUS palette, and fullscreen intropage. (perhaps a few Hardsprites used ?)

This was still better than the direct ports, as it could give some "16bit version look" thanks to the PLUS palette (Atari ST portage lookalike).

Price comparison

Thankfully most of those games were known as good games on the CPC. The bet was that it would still be a good game on Plus.

Yet people were not interested in buying an expensive cartridge with no or few advantages when the CPC version could be bought for cheaper and played on the Plus.

UK prices: in 1990 when the Plus/GX4000 was released, cartridge games were sold at £29.95, while disc versions were normally £14.99 and tape version was £9.99. Blank discs were £2.50 each. (Source Amstrad Action October 1990)

French prices: in 1990 when the Plus/GX4000 was released, cartridge games were sold for 250Fr , 150Fr for disc and 100Fr for tape. Blank discs were 20Fr each. (Fr = French Francs, pre-Euro currency in France).


The present and future

It is nowadays a common feature to modify existing CPC games into "Almost Direct Disk to Cartridge Port", just by modifying the colours in game to use a better choice of colours from the Pluss bigger palette.

As most cartridges were the original games released from the GX4000 era, it was mostly applied to games. Now that the operation of the ACID protection chip is known, and the development of various homebrew cartridge hardware solutions may lead to Direct Disk to Cartridge Port applied to any kind of software or new cartridge games that make fuller use of Plus features.