![256 color in basilisk ii 256 color in basilisk ii](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/8AYCcJK2G84/maxresdefault.jpg)
Didn't work either against the "8-bit problem". Constantly referring to Italian forums and complicated procedures to make your own 1 GB disk is not the solution.īecause the problem lies NOT in the virtual hard disk used by BasiliskII, troll. said in Macintosh (Basilisk II) 8-bit Color: If my efforts are not appreciated, well, TRFM and FU then.
![256 color in basilisk ii 256 color in basilisk ii](http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-RXqSBCHVWEk/Ub2CieiebDI/AAAAAAAAYB4/P4ogg0Rn9HQ/w1200-h630-p-k-no-nu/Plumed+Basilisk+2.jpg)
If you open your mind and use Google Translate with the italian forum page (as other user did) maybe you could use 256 color mode without any extra effort. If that guide is complicated maybe you have to stop to use a computer. My goal is to be able to start POP2 automatically from Retropie while invoking xboxdrv to allow joystick control. Like most early computer games, POP2 uses the keyboard for its controls.
256 COLOR IN BASILISK II INSTALL
(I'm only going to install a few games anyway, so it's not a great amount of work doing it this way.) As early computer games used a variety of keyboard controls and there was no real consistency in the keys used, I find it's better to have individual bash scripts invoking xboxdrv and starting each game with an individual xboxdrv configuration suited to that particular game. method (when it worked) automatically started POP2 for me, but I can't now get meneer's method to work at all for some reason.This method though is a lot quicker to setup. The Retropie Italia method of setting up MacOS currently doesn't allow me to start POP2 automatically and is a more laborious process of setting up initially, but it is very reliable from an installation perspective.I've taken the Retropie Italia method and started trying other methods of getting POP2 to start automatically using bash scripts, but without success so far.