10 Reasons the Amstrad CPC 6128 Is My Favorite Retro Computer

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  • čas přidán 26. 07. 2024
  • Support Noel's Retro Lab on Patreon: / noelsretrolab
    My entry for the #RetroFair2020 due to the cancelled Vintage Computer Festival Pacific Northwest. Just a quick presentation about my personal reasons for why the Amstrad CPC 6128 is my favorite retro computer.
    I suspect this should be particularly interesting to people outside of Europe since the Amstrad CPC had very little presence there. I hope it provides a good introduction and makes you want to learn more about it.
    Chapters
    00:00 Intro
    00:37 Great BASIC
    01:11 Good Keyboard
    01:47 Disk Drive
    02:25 128K of RAM
    02:52 CP/M
    03:24 Games Catalog
    04:00 Disk Support
    04:35 Best Colors
    05:04 Simple Architecture
    05:41 Homebrew Scene
    06:39 Conclusion
    Other Retro Fair 2020 videos: • #RetroFair
    retrofair2020.com/
    Some good Amstrad CPC emulators:
    Retro Virtual Machine www.retrovirtualmachine.org/en/
    WinAPE www.winape.net/
    Amstrad CPC software:
    CPCPower www.cpc-power.com/index.php?p...
    CPCRulez cpcrulez.fr/GamesTest/index.php
    List of games shown
    03:42 Black Tiger
    03:45 Crafton & Xunk / Get Dexter
    03:49 La abadía del crimen
    03:55 Eden Blues
    04:39 Sorcery
    05:24 Total Eclipse
    05:34 Mercs
    05:44 El tesoro perdido de Cuauhtemoc
    05:54 Jarlac
    06:02 Pinball Dreams
    06:12 Jet Set Willy
    Amstrad CPC 6128 Facebook group / 298743294763933
    Connect with Noel's Retro Lab:
    Discord ➤ / discord
    Twitter ➤ / noel_retrolab
    Facebook ➤ / noelsretrolab
    Instagram ➤ / noel_retrolab
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 399

  • @Diamondblade2008
    @Diamondblade2008 Před 4 lety +57

    FANTASTIC VIDEO! My father got me the CPC6128 back in 1985 (I was 7 back then). Used to spend hours playing games on it, though my father also used it a lot for word processing. I sorely miss my father saying to me when I was a child: ''Your school report this term is excellent! For that we are going to buy you a computer game tomorrow!'' I used to get mega-excited over that! Downloading an app onto my iPhone just isn't the same as my parents taking me to town to buy a game then me in a rush to get home and play it!

    • @jonh404
      @jonh404 Před rokem +2

      Aside from that, there's also the fact that phone games suuuuuck.

    • @Diamondblade2008
      @Diamondblade2008 Před rokem +1

      @@jonh404 Not only that, you bought a game and that was it. No stupid ads, no ‘premium subscriptions’ and no having to buy add-ons or upgrades.

    • @thierrya4950
      @thierrya4950 Před rokem +1

      For the time, this computer was ahead

    • @JP-cu2gm
      @JP-cu2gm Před 3 měsíci +1

      Got mine in ‘86 when I was eight! The feeling of buying a new game and then cannot wait to get home to play it (but parents still have three hours of shopping left to do)…

    • @Diamondblade2008
      @Diamondblade2008 Před 3 měsíci

      @@JP-cu2gm Hear hear! The excitement was almost uncontrollable for me when I selected the game that I wanted then I had to endure another 2 hours with my parents shopping!

  • @Jsarson1976
    @Jsarson1976 Před 10 měsíci +9

    I had an Amstrad CPC464 when I was young. I have fond memories of the games and the hours I spent with it learning simple coding 😊

  • @Warlock_UK
    @Warlock_UK Před 2 měsíci +2

    I really loved our Amstrads that we had when I was a kid, I spent many years programming on it from '84 to around 1990 when I got a C64 in my room.

  • @104d_3rr0r_vince
    @104d_3rr0r_vince Před 4 lety +28

    Still have my first one which was also my first computer ever.
    Discology is a killer app, never seen an app like this anywhere.
    Although an Amiga guy, CPC is in my heart.

  • @RMCRetro
    @RMCRetro Před 4 lety +50

    Great choice, I LOVE my 6128 having only had the 464 back in the day. Pride of place in the collection.

    • @NoelsRetroLab
      @NoelsRetroLab  Před 4 lety +4

      The 464 "tall keys" has a better keyboard. So arguably that one, with an added disk controller and a memory expansion would be the ultimate CPC :-)

    • @geofftottenperthcoys9944
      @geofftottenperthcoys9944 Před 3 lety

      Same, but got to work in a shop in Adelaide, South Australia selling them!

    • @ivarfiske1913
      @ivarfiske1913 Před 3 lety +1

      @@NoelsRetroLab maybe better keys, but the 464 was so tall it put a lot of pressure on the wrists. So if you were a heavy user of the 464s keyboard you probably will get problems with hands, arms and shoulders

    • @anticat900
      @anticat900 Před 2 lety +1

      I did find the 6128 a rather dull looking machine over the 464 though thought the German version of the 464 was the best. I particularly don't like the keyboard all squeezed into one block of keys.

    • @jonh404
      @jonh404 Před rokem

      @@anticat900 ditto, Amstrads effort to woo the business world made the 6128 a bit bland looking.
      My first computer was the 464, but my favourite is the 664.. It just struck that balance fire me, had the disc drive and kept the great keyboard layout.

  • @MGForums
    @MGForums Před 2 lety +19

    I wish I still had my 6128. That manual was so comprehensive, an a-z of all basic commands with a description of their use, it was excellent. I wrote a few basic games. One that really stood out was a fruit machine simulator that was honestly better than any of the commercial ones available. I incorporated a feature builder with holds, nudges, stop-a-reel, cash builder, hi-lo gamble etc, everything you’d expect from a real fruit machine at that time and most importantly the reels actually spun fast unlike the codemasters game.

    • @Klassenfeind
      @Klassenfeind Před rokem +1

      There were some games in the manual, for example Bomber or Raffles. 😀

    • @JP-cu2gm
      @JP-cu2gm Před 3 měsíci

      I made a football penalty simulator where you could shoot hi/lo left/centre/right and the stick man goalkeeper would guess a random direction to dive. Lols those were the days.

    • @JP-cu2gm
      @JP-cu2gm Před 3 měsíci

      @@Klassenfeinddid anyone ever type one in and it not be bugged?

  • @jorcasce
    @jorcasce Před 3 lety +5

    This is incredible, this was my first computer back in 1987, I was 9 years old and my dad got it to me. Looking back the best present was the manual. I learnt to program thanks to that manual!

    • @NoelsRetroLab
      @NoelsRetroLab  Před 3 lety +3

      Very cool! I also pretty much learned to program from that manual as well. It was really well done. I feel bad for kids today that don't have that kind of experience (Javascript or Roblox doesn't quite cut it).

    • @darrenwilson99
      @darrenwilson99 Před 2 lety +3

      The manual is exceptional. My Speccy mates loved it because it went into so much detail for every command.

  • @davewarrender2056
    @davewarrender2056 Před rokem +3

    Had one at 17 , wrote my first serious programme on it , a full word processor with wrap around typing , auto adjust wording. As well as highlighting . Plus store facility to disc or direct print out. All done in its basic. Brilliant beginners comp when learning to programme, the manual was great too

  • @robertcraane7910
    @robertcraane7910 Před 2 lety +4

    I had one... .wish i could find one... Loved that thing, and in a way it made my career in IT and later music! And it looked so much more modern and exiting back then! Wow, so glad to see the old girl again!

  • @jipmann-grooveclinic
    @jipmann-grooveclinic Před 3 měsíci

    Awesome - I got one of these for Christmas in 1985 and spent much of my childhood playing & programming it.. I got it down out of the loft about five years ago fix the disc drive and it all still worked great. Unfortunately, I decided to sell it as I didn’t have space for it… however if I realised they were still making the add-ons, I would have kept it.. super machine!

  • @gppsoftware
    @gppsoftware Před 2 měsíci

    I've still got my CPC6128 packed away in a box. Haven't used it for years, but it was the computer that launched me into professional software engineering.
    One of the last things I did with the 6128 was to write an assembler in Z80 assembler that had a full screen editor with debugger that swapped out to disk to do assembly and used the upper 64k to store object code, then save them to disk, ready for running. It meant that all source code was read from disk files (with #include files) and assembled into memory, enabling a 38k contiguous program to be written - an early form of virtual use of memory! It was way better than the HiSoft assembler which stored itself, source code and object code in the low 48k all at the same time, thereby limiting the size of program you could write. My assembler was about 7k and the editor 3.5k. Happy days!

  • @ecernosoft3096
    @ecernosoft3096 Před rokem +1

    "it has the best color palette of any 8bit computer"
    Atari 800 be like:
    ...
    but still. I must say, AWESOME video! It's beyond cute seeing your daughter use a 40 year old machine too. ;-)

  • @angelrogo
    @angelrogo Před měsícem

    That's exactly the microcomputer I had in my early teenage years, the Spanish model with the Spanish keyboard, including Ñ key.
    I have great memories of my first Basic 1.1 programs, even learning some machine code; my first experiences with the CPM DOS; great but really expensive videogames on 3" discs, and tons of not-so-expensive games on external tape. Later on, I only used the TV tuner for the screen.

  • @fallwitch
    @fallwitch Před 2 lety +2

    I just want to say you are an amazing dad for teaching your daughter to program. Just found your channel and love it. Looking forward to watching more/

  • @ctrlaltrees
    @ctrlaltrees Před 4 lety

    Another great video, Noel!
    A friend had a CPC6128 when I was a kid but it's a system I know absolutely nothing about. This is a really good introduction.

  • @AmAtAm
    @AmAtAm Před 4 lety

    I have always loved this machine and this was a really good summary of what’s so good about it.

  • @jonyballistic
    @jonyballistic Před 3 lety +4

    Absolutely terrific video! The amstrad with the disc drive was my first home computer. Learned programming on it. And oh the games! Starglider, mercenary, tau ceti. Thanks for this vid, great work

    • @NoelsRetroLab
      @NoelsRetroLab  Před 3 lety +2

      Glad you enjoyed it!!!

    • @Klassenfeind
      @Klassenfeind Před 2 lety

      Tau Ceti, written by Pete Cooke. Google it, there's an interesting interview with him :)

  • @YosemiteSam23
    @YosemiteSam23 Před 4 měsíci

    Had a 6128 in the late 80’s loved it 👌🏼🔥

  • @SelfIndulgentGamer
    @SelfIndulgentGamer Před 2 lety +1

    I got one of these free today and found this video to be really helpful. Thanks :)

  • @ervinpoljak8332
    @ervinpoljak8332 Před 2 lety +1

    had one back in 1986 ;) Great experience....played Samantha Fox Strip Poker and The Bard´s Tale :))))) ~ |CPM ! and yes.... Logo - this is what i liked back then :)

  • @ncbrady
    @ncbrady Před 4 lety

    good job as always Noel !

  • @miked4377
    @miked4377 Před 2 lety +1

    excellent video!

  • @chongtak
    @chongtak Před 3 lety +2

    In the end of the 80s, I purchased a secondhand external floppy disk drive for my cpc 464, it came with a second floppy disk drive that was 3.5". It always baffled me how the guy had succeeded to do that magic but it worked well. I copied a lot of games on 3.5" disks that where cheaper and very fancy, nobody believed me at school, until they came to my place and saw it.

  • @007JHS
    @007JHS Před 3 lety +4

    The Amstrad 6128 became for a time, the most popular educational computer in South Australia. The Ed Dept had its own software development facility (Satchell) which produced a lot of great products for use in schools.

    • @NoelsRetroLab
      @NoelsRetroLab  Před 3 lety +2

      Interesting! I knew Amstrad had a presence there, but I didn't realize it was such a big one. It's funny how many connections there are between Australia and Europe with retro computers. No wonder you can participate in Eurovision! 🤣

    • @shaun5552
      @shaun5552 Před 2 lety

      @@NoelsRetroLab For the record a school in Tasmania at that time (~1987) is the only place I've ever seen a 664.
      The CPC's in general were extremely common for a time, helped by being sold not only by proper computer stores but department stores and electrical goods retailers (the kind of shops that sell washing machines, TV's etc) as well. So it was physically very easy to obtain one.

  • @NicolasCorte
    @NicolasCorte Před 2 lety

    Love your channel

  • @friedbertmoessner2625

    It was my favor eather that time and I still have that computer. It was sold here in Germany from the company "Schneider". Thanks for your video :-)

  • @Xoferif
    @Xoferif Před 4 lety +1

    It's really great to see the next generation learning programming on classic machines! (Hello to Noel's daughter!) =)
    Although I was a Spectrum owner, I was hugely impressed with the 6128 when it was announced. Having a disc drive integrated into a micro as standard seemed an amazing idea back in the day.

  • @urmeli0815
    @urmeli0815 Před rokem +1

    Love that machine. I started programming on the CPC 6128 and have been doing it professionally until this day. Recently re-bought a 6128 on ebay, a disk emulator and an HDMI adapter. The colors look so great on a TFT!

    • @lovemadeinjapan
      @lovemadeinjapan Před 2 měsíci

      Go grab a CRT.... I find the games look much better on a tube, as you basically no longer see that the pixels are so wide. I run it on a cute 13 inch Sony over SCART, beautiful!

  • @curiousottman
    @curiousottman Před 2 lety +2

    I find it just fascinating that there are so many retro machines I’ve never heard of let alone used. Being in Canada we had the standard array of commodore, Atari, Apple, IBM and radio shack machines back in the day. Why did these machines never make it across the pond in any major quantities?
    Really nice video. My only complaint is that it’s far too short!

  • @DarnWhippets
    @DarnWhippets Před 2 lety +1

    Wish I still had mine too. Moved to an STFM when they came out.

  • @KorenLesthe
    @KorenLesthe Před 3 lety +4

    I grew up with the CPC 464 (my first game was Manic Miner).
    My brother then got a 6128 and I agree : it's also my favorite Retro Computer.

    • @NoelsRetroLab
      @NoelsRetroLab  Před 3 lety +4

      I'm glad you think so too! It's a fantastic computer for sure.

    • @Diamondblade2008
      @Diamondblade2008 Před 3 lety +1

      @@NoelsRetroLab I had the CPC6128 for many many years. Just wondered why Amstrad decided to tone down the colour scheme on the keyboard. I remember the CPC464 having a multitude of different colours on the keys, yet on the CPC6128, they were all a uniform grey (like on nearly all modern computers today).

  • @crusader77_retro
    @crusader77_retro Před 2 lety +1

    Gran review del 6128!. Aqui en España compitio codo con codo con el spectrum en cuanto a popularidad, en muchos colegios habia una sala de informatica compuesta de ellos. A mi en lo personal, marco mi vida y a lo que me dedico profesionalmente... Un saludo desde España, tienes nuevo suscriptor 😊

  • @skillaxxx
    @skillaxxx Před 2 lety +4

    To be honest, in 1985 there was also the Z80 MSX2 with 256 colours on-screen 😇 Still, it was a great machine, wish they had came with regular 3.5" floppies back in the day !

    • @jonh404
      @jonh404 Před rokem

      Ya, I'd never even heard of the msx standard till a few years ago.. I never appeared here in Australia.
      But after watching many videos it's practically a WHAT IF..... At this point.

    • @FinnbogiRagnarRagnarsson
      @FinnbogiRagnarRagnarsson Před rokem

      A neighbour had one. Graphically it blew everything else out of the water. She had very few games however and it was nearly impossible to get more of them. I was very envious of the graphics, but the selection of games she had was rather dull.

    • @lovemadeinjapan
      @lovemadeinjapan Před 2 měsíci

      The 2 is from 1986, and before they were available in Europe, we were already in 1987.

    • @skillaxxx
      @skillaxxx Před 2 měsíci

      @@lovemadeinjapan You could buy Sony MSX2 machines in Europe in 1986, it's just that Philips didn't release them until 1987.

    • @skillaxxx
      @skillaxxx Před 2 měsíci

      @@lovemadeinjapan By chance I saw the Philips VG8230 MSX2 was available from 1986-1-1 today ...

  • @vragec111
    @vragec111 Před 4 lety

    Thank you for the wonderful video. I had Schneider CPC 464, with green monitor 🤫. When I came to my friend to play on her mom's computer.. I was in utter shock to realise the speed of disk loading... Fell in love with the beauty of that machine..the sounds of disk drive humming and purring... 🤗🌷

    • @Diamondblade2008
      @Diamondblade2008 Před 4 lety

      Interesting comment. I also used to like the sounds the disk drive made. However there was one sound it made which gave me nightmares at night. The sound it made before it gave the ''Drive A: read fail (R)etry, (I)gnore or (C)ancel.'' message. I don't know if you know what sound I mean but it went something like this: ''Dit - dit, duh-duh nee-naw Dit - dit, duh-duh nee-naw'' That sound scared me a LOT when I was a kid!

    • @sdavies45
      @sdavies45 Před 3 lety

      @@Diamondblade2008 I know the noise that you're talking about, it could be a bit freaky. The PCWs used to make that nee-naw sound when they couldn't read the disc as well, when they had just been turned on, and you had to put in a boot disc, if it couldn't read it for some reason the screen used to flash green and then black and it would go "nee-naw" repeatedly, kind of freaky.

    • @Diamondblade2008
      @Diamondblade2008 Před 3 lety +1

      @@sdavies45 I am 42 and I stll remember that sound clear as glass today. I was 7 years old when my dad got me the CPC6128 back in 1985. I put an unformatted disc in the drive (not knowing it was unformatted) and typed 'Cat' (which lists the files stored on the disc; which my dad showed me how to do) and thats when I heard that sound for the first time and that error message came up. It scared me so much I ran into my mum's arms crying. Thankfully my Apple laptop and my iPhone never makes those sounds!

    • @sdavies45
      @sdavies45 Před 3 lety

      I am 37. I think I was about 12 though when I had my CPC6128, and I was 11 when I was introduced to the Amstrad PCW. I got the CPC because I wanted to write programs in BASIC.

  • @jamesburland
    @jamesburland Před rokem

    Love this!

  • @kjamison5951
    @kjamison5951 Před 3 lety +2

    I still own my 6128… I cannot bring myself to have it recycled.
    I used it all through my university course and used it to transcribe my handwritten notes and sketches to a digital format.
    I built a ROM interface that allowed me to add a standard 3.5” floppy drive and I also bought a ROM that allowed me to move files between the Amstrad and PC 720k disk format.
    With the DMP2000, I printed many documents.
    Favourite game was Cauldron, but I have hundreds of others on tape which I was able to transfer to disk for fast loading. I also edited the high score tables so when I played, I was always top of the tables.

    • @NoelsRetroLab
      @NoelsRetroLab  Před 3 lety +3

      Of course you can't have it recycled!! 🙀 That sounds like a well-loved, well-used CPC. I also did a lot of class work on it. Cauldron was great! I remember making the map for that game and having lots of fun with it 😃

  • @stephenbranley91
    @stephenbranley91 Před 5 měsíci

    We had a fun programming challenge at work the other day. After offering solutions in C and Pascal I also wrote a solution in Locomotive BASIC on a CPC emulator :)

  • @getdrinking
    @getdrinking Před 2 lety +1

    I loved that the 6128 came with a colour monitor

  • @georgebachaelor7600
    @georgebachaelor7600 Před rokem

    nice one bro - 6128 was the bomb back in the days. What it was also good for was the business / home school related software. TASMAN 6128, MINI OFFICE 2, things like that were my goto software for completing school work essays, assignments and reports :)

  • @jiannixflow1107
    @jiannixflow1107 Před rokem

    Love this!! I wish today life was simpler like back then! Thx for uploading

    • @lovemadeinjapan
      @lovemadeinjapan Před 2 měsíci

      It can be: 1) Ditch social media (uh, I'm still on CZcams), 2) ditch your smartphone (it is hard, but I find a Windows Phone fits at the right place: just the bare minimum of apps), 3) Make your workweek fit in 4 days maximum, 3 is even better, so you don't have to spend too much money, 4) Get those vitage products you always dreamt off. The only downside: back in the day I had a single 8-bit computer with maybe 10 games, now I have 5 with an abundance of programs.

  • @havenisse2009
    @havenisse2009 Před rokem

    I had a CPC6128 from 1985..2012. I had a 5.25" inch drive for it, and (cracked) versions of Protext, ProMerge, ProSpell, custom disc controller and much more. I could literally store 410K x 2 on each disc (had to cut index holes in the disc). I used that computer for school assignments, and it was surprisingly efficient. The joy of going to poweroff to writing in less than 5 seconds. Not even PCs today can do that. Sold it because it had a really low WAF. Regret it today in a way. But all good things have a time.

  • @chriswatson2407
    @chriswatson2407 Před 4 lety

    Nice to see your sprite included in the programme.

  • @paralaksa5035
    @paralaksa5035 Před 2 lety

    Agreed! I had a speccy but always loved the 6128 back in the day!

  • @ChristosFrantzolas
    @ChristosFrantzolas Před rokem

    Noel, Hi! The 6128 was my 2nd computer (yeah my first was a ZX, you guessed it) and I still have it but I hesitate to power it up often since it is might blow something and I like it as a fully working souvenir. Having said this, I wish to add to your excellent video that the expansion port of the 6128 carried all signals necessary to drive a second floppy so you could use an external 3.5 inch floppy (from an IBM clone) and with just a ribbon cable (and a power supply for this external drive) you had a physical B: drive with cheap 3.5 floppies. I also remember that with a simple switch on a select line you could also choose the floppy side without having to physically flip the disc!! Great times, eh? Thank you for your fine work, Christos.

  • @SmartHomeCoding
    @SmartHomeCoding Před 7 měsíci

    Wow, great video. I only had the CPC 464 as my first computer, but I absolutely agree with you. Unfortunately, I no longer have it
    and keep the memory alive with Winape 😊. Merry Christmas from Trier (Germany).

  • @robsretrostuff
    @robsretrostuff Před 2 lety

    Great video. I had a 664 back in the day

  • @yamitanomura
    @yamitanomura Před 2 lety

    nice video !

  • @Geffers58
    @Geffers58 Před 2 lety +1

    I loved this machine back in the 80's. I had a plug in thingy that gave instant assembly language - an enormous saving of time. I don't think I ever used its BASIC though. I did cross compilation onto other machines and all sorts.

    • @jonh404
      @jonh404 Před rokem

      When you say "plug in thingy", I'm thinking you probably had MAXAM on a rom board.

  • @tezinho81
    @tezinho81 Před 3 lety +1

    I learned to program BASIC on the 6128. The original manual had many pages of BASIC code which I spent many happy hours copying onto the screen.

    • @NoelsRetroLab
      @NoelsRetroLab  Před 3 lety +2

      Yes, the manual was great and really taught you a lot to get you started programming with the Amstrad. I have lots of fond memories as well.

  • @DenizTurkmen
    @DenizTurkmen Před 8 měsíci

    Had a C64 but my neighbors had an 6128. It was really cool to have a built-in disk drive. I also agree about the colors, whenever I saw game ads with screenshots I remember Amstrad ones standing out.

  • @Jimmy-B-
    @Jimmy-B- Před 5 měsíci

    Was my first computer as a child. Remember not liking keyboard sound when you press the buttons. Sounded to tinny. That was another reason to be envious of the Amiga at the time

  • @ElectronGordo
    @ElectronGordo Před 4 lety

    Hop! she got's out like in Lord of The Ring, when Frodo took out the Ring from his finger! :) Nice video again.+

  • @TheGrunt76
    @TheGrunt76 Před 4 lety

    Nice video and I agree on all points! I had 464 back in the day and it was a wonderful machine. As my retro computing hobby really escalated last autumn, I went and purchased nice 6128 with dd replaced with gotek. I also have a working disk drive, so I can return it to original condition if I want to. At first I used it with OSSC to flat screen monitor and occasionally with small CRT TV, but then decided to go full real deal and also purchased original color monitor from ebay.

    • @NoelsRetroLab
      @NoelsRetroLab  Před 4 lety +1

      Nice! I'd love to keep around the original color monitor too, but I don't have much space. So I have to make do with a single CRT for all my retro needs. At least it's a Sony Trinitron and the image quality is great.

  • @skesinis
    @skesinis Před 2 lety

    You reminded me of a mod that we made with a friend of mine on his 6128 back in the very early ‘90s. We changed the 3” single sided 180kB drive to a 5.25” double sided 360kB PC drive. We used a switch to select the sides and the drive was used to copy Pascal 3.0 programs from his CPC6128 to a PC and continue developing when he was at his uncle’s PC. Even though I really liked the CPC6128, I couldn’t afford it when it was new and I only had a ZX Spectrum 48k which another friend had donated to me, many years after he had it, as he had moved to an Amiga 500. Even the Spectrum was enough though to trigger my interest in Z80 assembly, using just a book’s appendix to convert the asm opcodes to numbers that I could then type as data on a basic loader program. I know exactly how frustrating it was saving to a tape, but at the time I didn’t know any better.

  • @GermanAracil
    @GermanAracil Před 6 měsíci

    It’s My favourite computer. With ZEDIS II purchased in the el Corte inglés like a extraneous program, was my introduction to the programming in ASM.

  • @PJBonoVox
    @PJBonoVox Před 4 lety +1

    I never had a CPC machine, only a C64. But a couple of friends had CPCs and I loved the palette and the basic. Looking back now, if the CPC had hardware sprites it would have been an absolute powerhouse.

    • @NoelsRetroLab
      @NoelsRetroLab  Před 4 lety

      Agreed. That's what the Plus range has, but they came out way too late to be relevant.

    • @PJBonoVox
      @PJBonoVox Před 4 lety

      @@NoelsRetroLab Yeah, too little too late sadly.

  • @pengvin3524
    @pengvin3524 Před 2 lety

    I LOVED this machine. i played lots of Infocom adventures on one

  • @mnomic8371
    @mnomic8371 Před 2 lety +1

    My dad had this computer and I loved it; I had the zx spectrum +3 which had the same disk drive (the +3 was also made by Amstrad). The difference was, the Amstrad had a better colour pallette 👍🏻

  • @jameslye3452
    @jameslye3452 Před 2 lety

    bought a second hand one in the 90's.
    still have the manual now which i use with a cpc emulator.
    I remember scouring the car boot sales and the odd computer fair for the floppy Discs.
    Fun entry into computers

  • @krisvantuerenhout537
    @krisvantuerenhout537 Před 4 lety +3

    This was my second computer after my ZX81. And it sure was I nice upgrade on all fronts. 1 Year ago I bought a CPC6128+ .. these 8bit computers had even a better color palette ;-) It's sad there is not much CZcams content about this range of CPC's.

    • @joefish6091
      @joefish6091 Před 2 lety

      Amstrad was not American, so not much utube, the UK CPCers (and PCWers)need to make videos.

  • @syrus3k
    @syrus3k Před 2 lety

    This is almost the zx spectrum +3.. I had one of those, I loved it.

  • @Unknown-sp4gi
    @Unknown-sp4gi Před 3 lety +1

    This is where gaming started for me :) The Legend Of Kage, Head Over Heels, Arkanoid, great memories.

    • @tezinho81
      @tezinho81 Před 3 lety

      Head over Heels was awesome. Did you ever play Spy Vs Spy?

    • @dimitriskarapostolis9880
      @dimitriskarapostolis9880 Před 2 lety

      Fruity Frank, Oh Mummy, Boulder Dash, Bomb Jack, Desert Fox, Gauntlet, Match Day, Moon Buggy, Pyjamarama some of my initial mines!

  • @spinnetti
    @spinnetti Před 2 lety

    Never had those here, but looks pretty good!

  • @SparkyMAWy
    @SparkyMAWy Před 4 lety +1

    CPC6128: My favourite machine.
    Though I have a CPC464 that I inherited from my late grandfather that I learnt computer fundamentals on, that still works and I got loads of bits for.
    My CPC6128 has a 512kb RAM box which is good for SymbOS and CP/M Plus.

    • @NoelsRetroLab
      @NoelsRetroLab  Před 4 lety

      Nice! Yes, there are awesome add-ons for the Amstrad. And people are still designing new ones!

  • @calebfuller4713
    @calebfuller4713 Před 3 lety +1

    I had one of these too. It is still my favourite retro computer. It was definitely one of the better BASIC versions among 8-bit computers and I fondly remember learning and writing programs on it.
    I'm actually more impressed nowdays by the fact it ran CP/M and finding the wealth of software I COULD have used - industry standards like Wordstar, dBASE II, Supercalc, Turbo Pascal, MS BASIC, FORTRAN and COBOL. Actually if I'd learnt dBASE programming back then, my IT programming career might have gone further...

    • @NoelsRetroLab
      @NoelsRetroLab  Před 3 lety

      Nice! Yes, it did have a lot of non-game software. I believe I tried my first version of Turbo Pascal on the Amstrad, and I did a lot of school work on word processors on it. Quite a well-rounded machine!

  • @karim2k
    @karim2k Před rokem

    Back in time, i did stood as a unique machine among the commodores and the MSX machines and few people could deal with it so much is was advanced

  • @mrtiff99
    @mrtiff99 Před 4 lety

    Just discovered your channel. I grew up with spectrums and Commodores and never really got to use an amstrad. Your right about the colour palette ( I hated the c64s). Great channel keep up the good work

    • @NoelsRetroLab
      @NoelsRetroLab  Před 4 lety

      Thanks! Glad you're enjoying it. Time to try out some Amstrads, even if it's through emulators :-)

  • @jonh404
    @jonh404 Před rokem

    Hahahaha I'm sitting here in Australia in the dark at 3am watching his video, laughing out loud at his jab at the location of the cursor keys... THANK YOU 😂
    Totally made me burst into laughter.
    The 6128 is my least favourite CPC, The CPC664 being my favourite because it got the disc drive & the cursor keys 😂.
    I hope Noel reads his messages.

    • @NoelsRetroLab
      @NoelsRetroLab  Před rokem

      I do, I do 😃 Glad you enjoy the cross-pattern keys. The 664 is beautiful. Certainly much prettier than the 6128!

  • @rishadq
    @rishadq Před 2 lety

    Awesome find! The CPC6128 was my first real computer, aside from my Casio handheld calculator/computer. Plug in a joystick and away you go! :-)

  • @Ingens_Scherz
    @Ingens_Scherz Před 3 lety +2

    Had one of these for a couple of years before I got an Amiga 500. Totally loved it. Unfortunately (?) it and all my games and peripherals paid for the 500!

  • @JakeBirkett
    @JakeBirkett Před 3 lety +2

    Saving to tape was a big pain indeed! So slow.

    • @NoelsRetroLab
      @NoelsRetroLab  Před 3 lety +1

      Yeah, absolutely. But at least most of the saving to tape was pretty small since it was assembly so it was just a few KB. But still, no comparison with having the luxury of a disk!

  • @matthiasmartin1975
    @matthiasmartin1975 Před 2 lety +1

    I like how the console colors remind me of the ones used in IRIX.

  • @moterov4
    @moterov4 Před 4 lety +1

    My first game was "Spannerman". I learned programming with CPC6128, I remember in my 2nd computer academy with PCs that used the GWBASIC, but I already carried my programs printed in the CPM's BASIC MALLARD and I think to remember it was quite similar.

    • @dartsma464
      @dartsma464 Před 4 lety +2

      I started with Spannerman too. Are there more than the two of us that did that?

    • @Klassenfeind
      @Klassenfeind Před 2 lety +1

      Spannerman, Oh Mummy, Roland in Space (?) 😁

  • @The_Wandering_Nerd
    @The_Wandering_Nerd Před 3 lety +1

    Growing up I had to admire the Amstrad CPC from afar because they weren't sold in the USA, at least not where I could get them. But I've always liked that soothing yellow-on-blue font that's reminiscent of the CGA font on the much more expensive IBM PCs. Spending my childhood squinting my eyes at Apple IIs and TI-99/4As, you got to appreciate systems with nicely readable on-screen text.

    • @NoelsRetroLab
      @NoelsRetroLab  Před 3 lety +1

      Yes, the colors and the fonts were great. I'm surprised you would even know of Amstrad CPCs in the US though. Were you importing UK magazines or something? Otherwise they were virtually unknown over there.

    • @The_Wandering_Nerd
      @The_Wandering_Nerd Před 3 lety +1

      @@NoelsRetroLab my memory is a little hazy, but I know they were mentioned in Omni magazine, in their computer review sections, and occasionally multiplatform games would have Amstrad and Spectrum screenshots on their boxes (presumably so they didn't have to reprint them for the US and UK markets.) I think they may have also mentioned them on the Computer Chronicles TV show. So I was aware that Amstrad was a thing, although I admit that information on them was extremely limited in the US pre-internet.

  • @willyloops
    @willyloops Před 3 lety

    I was talking about the Firefox (Clint Eastwood´s movie) with a friend a couple of hours ago and looking for the game version for this Amstrad cpc6128 and I just found this channel ...and....c´mon !!! I can not believe it !! I know you Noel !! I´m Guillermo, from Luanco, you recorded several games for me to play in this Amstrad when I was a child, I even played one game you created for this device about a time machine (kind like a roll game where to choose what to do)...years after of that, your father was my math teacher at highschool and your mother my language or literature teacher as well (they have to forgive me I was a very bad student !!!)......Surely you knew my sister Sara too (she was very good student).......I played a lot with your cousins Alejandro and Ramón Luis in la plazoleta de la torre del reloj when we were children....I can't believe that you have this channel and that you continue loving this machine, I subscribe and greetings since childhood Noel !!

    • @NoelsRetroLab
      @NoelsRetroLab  Před 3 lety

      Hombre, Guillermo, qué casualidad!! Claro que me acuerdo. Sara y yo éramos muy amigos. Pues ahora llevo un par de años en Luanco. Si te entra el gusanillo por probar el Amstrad otra vez, mírate el emulador RetroVirtualMachine que está muy bien. Un abrazo!

  • @missionpassed4584
    @missionpassed4584 Před rokem

    I had an Amstrad cpc 464 in the 80s and over time had collected many many games and magazines and was very much used to the quirks of tape cassette games including waiting an eternity for a game to load only for it not to, then came the 6128 with its hard disk system, it was awesome, no waiting for ages and just seemed so much more modern, my friend at the same time got the the GX4000 which I tried but just never gone on with it, anyway a great little machine, sadly once I got the snes it all went all sold off I have many regrets in my life and that was one of the biggest.

  • @AnthonyFlack
    @AnthonyFlack Před 2 lety +1

    For me the benefit of CP/M was that you could play all the Infocom adventure games.

  • @adroharv9213
    @adroharv9213 Před 3 lety

    I absolutely loved how vivid the Amstrad palette was and it really stands it out. To be fair that's why I look so fondly at all the 8bits from this time as they were so different in feel from each machine. I think the C64 had the most natural colour scheme with it's muted look in terms of a more realistic feel but the Amstrads beautifully garish look is beautiful to behold

    • @NoelsRetroLab
      @NoelsRetroLab  Před 3 lety

      Definitely! That made it challenging to make more natural skin tones or earth tones, but they nailed the garish fun video game feel 😃

    • @calebfuller4713
      @calebfuller4713 Před 3 lety +1

      The Amstrad's palette was purely mathematical. It was RGB with 3 levels for each element (on, half, or full) giving a total of 27 colours.

  • @mrljgibson
    @mrljgibson Před 10 měsíci

    I have a two ZX Spectrum 48k plus computers for nostalgia reasons, but the best things after that were all mainframe systems and workstations.

  • @dracomalinois
    @dracomalinois Před 2 lety

    2:23 Les passagers du vent !

  • @partyguinness
    @partyguinness Před 7 měsíci

    We had a gig whereby we could record/bootleg games from the 6128 cartridge to cassette for the CPC464

  • @arnolda.lampel6087
    @arnolda.lampel6087 Před 4 lety +3

    It was the very 1st computer that I got and I still have & use it TODAY :-)
    Actually it is the German "Schneider" version w/ centronics connectors instead of edge connectors. Those have been given me some headache, since the pinout is different from the Amstrad version AND different from the original Schneider manual.

    • @Klassenfeind
      @Klassenfeind Před 2 lety

      Arnold war ja sogar die interne Bezeichnung für die CPCs bei Amstrad:)

  • @philiphandforth4390
    @philiphandforth4390 Před 3 lety

    Really liked this video, have you ever tried symbOS on your cpc, I've been looking into the OS and it seems interesting, would love to see some retro user perspectives on it..

  • @YosemiteSam23
    @YosemiteSam23 Před 4 měsíci

    Manic Miner used to drive me insane 🤣

  • @gamexentralx
    @gamexentralx Před 2 lety

    I love that machine.

  • @frankiii9165
    @frankiii9165 Před 3 lety

    El ordenador que nos merecemos!

  • @baltasarq
    @baltasarq Před 3 lety +2

    All in all, the Amstrad 6128 was the best balanced home computer in 1985. I would not have recognized it back then though, being an 128 speccy guy!

    • @NoelsRetroLab
      @NoelsRetroLab  Před 3 lety +2

      If only it had faster screen access somehow, it would have been great. That was (and is) its weak point, even compared to the Speccy since its screen data was a lot smaller.

    • @baltasarq
      @baltasarq Před 3 lety +1

      @@NoelsRetroLab Well, yes, but that was because the Speccy sported the famous colour clash.

  • @PITBULLI79
    @PITBULLI79 Před 2 lety

    Great video! I recently bought 2 6128s to remember my childhood.Regarding the new games are they sold on disks or other formats? Thanks!

  •  Před 2 lety

    You mentioned it but I want to strengthen it: 80 column support! One of the few popular 8 bit machines that have this. Soo much more comfort when dialing into a BBS or a larger machine via RS232.

  • @GrantMeStrength
    @GrantMeStrength Před 2 lety +1

    Still a great video 🙂

  • @TheVanillatech
    @TheVanillatech Před 7 měsíci

    "Amstrad/Schneider"
    I had a 464, so no disk drive. I borrowed a friends disk drive so I could play Lemmings. Great computer though I always wanted an Amiga, and never got one. Croco Magneto appeared on the covertape of Amstrad Action one year, around 1989/1990. A french game I believe.

  • @douro20
    @douro20 Před 2 lety +2

    Have you ever considered translating some of your old CPC games? 'La Máquina del Tiempo' looks like a nice one.

  • @Skunkiboi
    @Skunkiboi Před rokem

    It was also popular in Germany. Some schools had it in order to teach students how to code.

  • @RealDukeOfEarl
    @RealDukeOfEarl Před 2 lety

    Sorcery II was the game that first used disk overlay, and it did it for the 664. Man I remember beating Sorcery on the 464. Good times.

  • @insoft_uk
    @insoft_uk Před 2 lety

    The 6128 was an awesome machine, I remember as a kid spending time in Dixons we’re they had them on display used to type in simple basic programmes and one of the nice things the 6128 had was the colour numbers written down on the top of the drive was so handy.
    Tho never had one myself I grew up with a ZX Spectrum +2, as 6128 was priced too high tho the 6128 to me was the best 8-bit micros of the times

  • @GandaMelgao
    @GandaMelgao Před 6 měsíci

    I believe CPM was needed to play Infocom text adventures, my favourite type of game. Never had an Amstrad Cpc. I bought an Amiga instead. But for a while, The Cpc6128 was my dream computer, the one I desired most 😊

  • @darky4312
    @darky4312 Před 4 lety +4

    My first game "PUNCHY" my second game "SORCERY" (my first love), i have 12 years hold, now 47. I love my AMSTRAD CPC.

    • @NoelsRetroLab
      @NoelsRetroLab  Před 4 lety +1

      I never played Punchy, but I absolutely love Sorcery. One of the most influential games for me. It was absolutely magical!

    • @Diamondblade2008
      @Diamondblade2008 Před 4 lety +1

      One game I played to death on my (sadly now dead) CPC6128 was Tornado Low Level, where you fly a plane dropping bombs on targets. Used to spend hours every weekend playing that. My dad said to my mum ''He is really happy with that game. He can't stop playing it.'' Fond memories.

    • @NoelsRetroLab
      @NoelsRetroLab  Před 4 lety

      @@Diamondblade2008 I never played that one, so I'm going to have to remedy that. Downloading it right now... :-)

    • @Diamondblade2008
      @Diamondblade2008 Před 4 lety

      @@NoelsRetroLab That game is really good. You have to check out the scrolling in that game!

    • @ivarfiske1913
      @ivarfiske1913 Před 3 lety

      @@Diamondblade2008 full speed vertical hardware scrolling

  • @unairamos74
    @unairamos74 Před 2 lety

    Excelente vídeo! Me encanta el uso haces de la tipografía original del CPC (mi primer ordenador fue el 464)… sabes el nombre de esa fuente?

  • @MrJef06
    @MrJef06 Před 2 lety

    11. The case doesn't suffer from yellowing because it is black :)
    Nice video. The CPC6128 was my first computer when I was a child, I briefly had a 664 as a loaner because the shop was out of stock for the 6128 ;-) Although I was quite attracted to the flashy colors of the 464 keyboard, the 6128;was obviously a much better (and more expensive) choice!

  • @jediknight2350
    @jediknight2350 Před 2 lety

    my fav first computer was the texas instrument ti994a , i had an amstrad 6128 but when amiga came out the old amstrad got sold cheap lol.