@@Ecclesia_ @fatkart7641 holy crap no. Back in the 80s and early 90s, there were lots of different computer architectures all around the world. The MSX was just one of them, it eas very popular in Japan, in some countries in Europe and in Brazil. At some point the market was dominated by what was once the IBM-PC architecture, which we used to call it just the "PC" when comparing it to, say the Amiga, Atari ST, MAC, Commodore 64, etc.
@@rafaellima83 The MSX is still technically a "PC", a personal computer. Why is the TG16 named PC Engine in Japan? It was named after NEC "PC" series. IBM was just the most common PC at the time
This dungeon song is a banger.
MSX2 ?
What platform is MSX?
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MSX
@@realid2734 Oh I thought it was a console (i.e. NES, PSX, GC, etc). Thanks.
@@fatkart7641 The MSX was basically the PC counterpart of the consoles back then.
@@Ecclesia_ @fatkart7641 holy crap no.
Back in the 80s and early 90s, there were lots of different computer architectures all around the world. The MSX was just one of them, it eas very popular in Japan, in some countries in Europe and in Brazil.
At some point the market was dominated by what was once the IBM-PC architecture, which we used to call it just the "PC" when comparing it to, say the Amiga, Atari ST, MAC, Commodore 64, etc.
@@rafaellima83 The MSX is still technically a "PC", a personal computer. Why is the TG16 named PC Engine in Japan? It was named after NEC "PC" series. IBM was just the most common PC at the time