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HoloDust said:
Conina said:

HF-modulation was the worst!

When I got my first computer in 1987 (Commodore 128) I bought it together with a Commodore 1701 monitor.

The video signal was seperated into "luma", "chroma" and "audio"... I was very happy with the video quality back in those days.

Yeah, of course it was the worst - and it was what developers where expecting how it's in most homes, RF or Composite at best. And it's how they developed those games, with multiple CRTs, to see how their art behaves in real world, versus monitors they were designing their games on.

As I said, I went into home video gaming around '83, and all my friends and me had those systems (ZX or C64, it was more or less even split) hooked via RF, or composite at best...so that's how I remember them.

In the late 80s I was on Amiga 500 hooked to TV first with composite via modulator for a short time, then via SCART.

I don't know about that. A lot of tvs in the late 80's had really good comb filters. Edit: Nope. I can't actually verify this. It may still be true, but until I can get my hands on a good 80's Trinitron for testing I can't make this claim. Composite going to a TV with a good comb filter looks like S-Video. Sure, only 10% of households had them but a lot of companies wanted to support the cutting edge of tech. Also a lot of games were ported from the arcades or computers where inputs were more advanced. There was even an arcade version of Super Mario Bros. The PPU chip in those cabinets was used to make the first RGB mod for NES. 

Edit: My friend has an NES on a brand new PCB with all new caps. The composite output on it is godly and would have been what a new NES in 87 would have looked like. I'll post a pic later today. 

Last edited by Cerebralbore101 - 1 day ago