Why was the Atari Jaguar so Difficult to Develop on?

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  • Опубликовано: 25 июл 2024
  • Another installment in the difficult development series!
    This one took awhile, I hope you enjoy! Next up, the Sega Saturn!
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Комментарии • 371

  • @bryede
    @bryede Год назад +126

    I was a Jag developer. The biggest problem is that the fastest resources are extremely hamstrung so you either write something slow on the 68000 and get the job done in time, or carefully craft small optimized GPU assembly routines like a demoscene coder, swap them in and out as needed, and take years to get it running properly. I remember we wrote all kinds of test benchmarks because it was impossible to know what the savings would really be without doing it both ways.

    • @XfromDarkHorse
      @XfromDarkHorse Год назад +7

      Thanks for the information, but i have a question. What was the name of the video game that you developed for Atari Jaguar?

    • @eriks3260
      @eriks3260 Год назад +3

      What game did you program???

    • @enhancementtank5876
      @enhancementtank5876 Год назад

      Sounds like a sorrowful excuse. You failed and gave the market to Sony a consumer appliance cheaper and weaker than any home console compared to its generations next to The ps2 which was criminally weaker than the dream cast GameCube and xbox

    • @Lyricaldeamin
      @Lyricaldeamin Год назад +1

      What are some titles u worked on ?

    • @Stabby666
      @Stabby666 Год назад

      @@enhancementtank5876
      ^ does anyone know what this idiot is talking about?

  • @FZuloaga
    @FZuloaga 2 года назад +42

    So Atari came with the phrase "do the math" ... how can I do the math with a flawed hardware? xD Great video.

    • @ZygalStudios
      @ZygalStudios  2 года назад +13

      🤣🤣 very carefully.
      Thank you!

    • @MaxAbramson3
      @MaxAbramson3 Год назад +3

      Oh! I see what ya did there!

  • @dyscotopia
    @dyscotopia 2 года назад +25

    It seems like the Jaguar was difficult to develop for for some of the same reasons as the Saturn. Tho Sega had more resources to develop its own games and create better tools

  • @Piss_Pistofferson
    @Piss_Pistofferson 3 года назад +19

    I love the "Jag-WIRE".

  • @sunnohh
    @sunnohh 3 года назад +12

    “Just throw in some null ops” that is some old school problem solving....lol

    • @ZygalStudios
      @ZygalStudios  3 года назад

      🤣🤣

    • @SianaGearz
      @SianaGearz 2 года назад +1

      This nop-after-jump to clear pipeline isn't actually unique. Hitachi SuperH used on... well everything SEGA 32-bit, has 16-bit instructions but 32-bit memory bus; so usually it has the next instruction already preloaded, and they decided, let's make it 'always' instead of 'usually', and let's just start executing it anyway, regardless of any jump that happens; so canonically you nop after a jump, or alternatively, you can just shove an extra instruction from before the jump into there to be executed while the jump is happening. The time would be wasted otherwise anyway! The CPU wasn't designed with assembly programming in mind, but explicitly for C compilers.
      But buffering a div with nops is not what one may call good design... and it's usually a variable length instruction, so it is a waste of time.

  • @charlesjmouse
    @charlesjmouse 2 года назад +8

    The Jaguar: A console that was pushed out far too quickly.
    -The excellent hardware wasn't properly integrated and implemented - couple of tweaks could have made it more robust and powerful.
    -The support library's were somewhere between useless and non-existent - this made it a pig to develop for on stupidly short timelines.
    -Atari wasn't in a position to provide sufficient support or marketing - there was too much to do in too little time with insufficient money.
    It may have bombed anyway, but at least it could have gone down fighting.

    • @maroon9273
      @maroon9273 2 года назад +3

      Cojag arcade board is a what if scenario had atari used a m68020 or the great MIPS R3000 cpu. With the r3000 it would've rivaled the ps1 and Saturn performance with tweaks on the hardware as well. Plus, solving to remove the bugs from the coprocessors.

  • @twh563
    @twh563 3 года назад +6

    I absolutely have no idea what was presented here but sat on my couch, watching the whole video as if I knew what was being explained. 🤣🤣🤣 You a smart dude. Great video!!

  • @amare65
    @amare65 3 года назад +46

    Sooooo, programming a game on an Atari Jaguar was equivalent to trying to eat a hot dog stuck in the spokes of a bicycle wheel whilst moving at 60 mph during an earthquake. 🤔

    • @ZygalStudios
      @ZygalStudios  3 года назад +10

      Maybe a little easier that that 🤣, but yes difficult

    • @richhutnik2477
      @richhutnik2477 Год назад +6

      So they said F it and coded to the 68000 instead.

  • @finburkard4732
    @finburkard4732 2 года назад +2

    "So I decided to add it to the stack"
    ...I see what you did there.

  • @Kevin_40
    @Kevin_40 3 года назад +12

    "jagwire" eh, oh boy

    • @ZygalStudios
      @ZygalStudios  3 года назад +3

      JAG-U-ARE ;)

    • @blahdelablah
      @blahdelablah 3 года назад +1

      @@ZygalStudios It sounds like "Jag-u-wire" in the video. Thanks for the video though!

    • @NitroDubzzz
      @NitroDubzzz 16 дней назад

      I think the country that won both world wars gets to dictate the English language

  • @EugenioAngueira
    @EugenioAngueira 3 года назад +6

    That was really interesting! Loved how you explained how the Jaguar works and how objective you were in your commentary! Nicely done!

  • @user-gf3vb7xj3h
    @user-gf3vb7xj3h 3 года назад +10

    Atari Jaguar was awesome

  • @paulpicillo8337
    @paulpicillo8337 4 года назад +7

    Jaguar is one of my top 5 systems of all time. It's an interesting machine that has some great original games, some amazing ports and a vibrant homebrew scene. Thanks for taking the time to showcase this underappreciated segment of console gaming history

    • @ZygalStudios
      @ZygalStudios  4 года назад +3

      Of course Paul! It's a great honor to cover a system like this. The architecture is a work of art. And with a few tweaks, and maybe some more engineers working on this design, originally, it could have been pretty competitive. It's cool to see it where it's at now though.

    • @SpandoSpando
      @SpandoSpando 3 года назад +1

      wich are your favorite games on it?

    • @willman85
      @willman85 5 месяцев назад

      You like the controller?

  • @mbe102
    @mbe102 3 года назад +2

    Just stumbled on this, but holy damn is this ever in my wheelhouse of enjoyment! Good stuff man, very good stuff! One of the more easier subs I've ever had the delight of making!

  • @Joshua-fm1nh
    @Joshua-fm1nh 2 года назад +6

    I just bought my third jaguar. Only reason was alien vs predator. It cost $400 this time for a new one, the last one I bought before that was in the mid-90s at Walmart for $50.

    • @chuco915C
      @chuco915C Год назад

      How much would a sega cd go for right now? I still have mine and it’s the one you would connect on the side of the genesis.

    • @randyfemrite7525
      @randyfemrite7525 Месяц назад +1

      Did you know they were thinking about using the Lynx for AvP radar/sonar? How awesome would that have been...They had the machine but didn't know how to use it properly.

  • @jerrycox9618
    @jerrycox9618 3 года назад +1

    Just ran onto Your channel. I bought my first Jaguar in 1995, when it was on its way out. Bought the CD add on also. Still love both of them. Thanks for taking me back to my late teens early 20s. I subscribed. Thanks 😊!

    • @ZygalStudios
      @ZygalStudios  3 года назад

      Thank YOU for coming by! :)
      Welcome!

  • @sbanner428
    @sbanner428 Год назад

    Your videos are absolutely incredible and I love how digestible they are! They get me interested further in CS through things I already love; good stuff!

  • @WhitePointerGaming
    @WhitePointerGaming Год назад +5

    Cool video. The weird hybrid of two 64-bit processors, two 32-bit processors and one 16-bit processor still to this day makes it unclear if the system as a whole is 64-bit as Atari claimed it was.

    • @LakeHowellDigitalVideo
      @LakeHowellDigitalVideo Год назад

      System bus size was usually how they determined it back then. Like how the 386sx was 16 bit and 386dx was 32 bit

    • @thefurthestmanfromhome1148
      @thefurthestmanfromhome1148 11 месяцев назад +2

      It was basically just marketing talk, because it had 64-bit architecture, it coukd be marketed as a 64-bit console, but it wasn't a 'true' 64-bit system as we would know it.

  • @CharlesHepburn2
    @CharlesHepburn2 3 года назад +41

    Sounds to me like the hardware and software development tools needed more time in the oven; as they were a bit under-baked. Probably Atari trying to rush the system out and save the company. I actually was one of the first people to own a Jag in ‘93… I had hopes Atari would reclaim their spot on top of the video game world… at that age, I totally bought into the 64-bit marketing stuff. Lol… hindsight!

    • @SianaGearz
      @SianaGearz 2 года назад +7

      I think it's the wrong approach altogether. Sure you can design an elegant processor; but can you spin up the whole ecosystem around it? Especially if you're a small engineering firm? Can you make sure it doesn't have critical bugs? Sure it would have all been shaken out eventually, given enough time and resources; but if you have little to work with, the last thing you do is build this sort of failure mode into your design proposal.
      Imagine what if they did a SENSIBLE thing. Like a couple commodity RISC cores, SuperH or whatever, or DSPs, and a self-designed jungle chip in the middle to do the line blits, scratch RAM, bus management, DAC and IO operations, the usual. Then they could focus on the core competence of delivering a chip, it would be structurally simpler so it would likely be free of critical errata, and there would be debug boards available for the commodity chips used, which you just solder in place of the chip, instant debugging capability, plus more debugging capabilities foreseen in the CPU core proper. Besides, the 68k crutch can be ditched then, potentially making the whole thing cheaper too. And not necessarily weaker or slower than with these custom DSPs.
      Sure, less ambitious, but ambition means work, and you want to do the least possible amount of work to deliver a given or best possible result. Less work means more opportunity to do the work at high quality, on time and under budget.

    • @maroon9273
      @maroon9273 2 года назад +7

      @@SianaGearz even a armv3 or nec v series CPU would've been great risc CPU for the jaguar. M68k is the worst main cpu to use for a 32-bit console.

    • @werpu12
      @werpu12 10 месяцев назад

      @@maroon9273 The 68k was a known entity, so not a bad choice per se, its assembler was widely known and it had good tools, Jags problem were the custom chips, while powerful, Atari lacked the time and money to provide proper dev tools for them. The company behind the custom chips survived another console lifecycle, the successors to the tom and jerry chips made it into the Nuon console almost no one knows about, but with the PSX basically the methodology was shifting and those chips did not cut it anymore!
      Atari had good foresight but it took too long and they ran out of money!

    • @theobserver4214
      @theobserver4214 Месяц назад

      ⁠@@maroon9273These would’ve been expensive compared to a 68K. The problem was that Atari opted for a the regular 68000 when the 68020 would’ve removed a giant bottleneck on the system.

  • @przemekkobel4874
    @przemekkobel4874 2 года назад +4

    That took some effort to make, thank you for that. I didn't closely follow every bit of information you you presented, but two things stood out: UART bug seems like a problem in comms between JAG and another external device (like modem or another Jaguar in some kind of network), not inter-chip communications. MC68K 32-bit issue from my understanding means that you just cannot trust some long word operations in two memory areas. Rest of the memory is fine, other '.l' assembly instructions seem fine, and non-long-word operations are fine (so you can use two move.w or four move.b instead of one move.l). Annoying, but not a deal-breaker.
    Again, thanks for the interesting vid.

  • @thefurthestmanfromhome1148
    @thefurthestmanfromhome1148 2 года назад +9

    In terms of the 68000 being used as the Manager chip..
    The 68020 and 68030 chips were both considered for that role at one point, but dropped due to how much it would push up the manufacturering costs.

    • @PlasticCogLiquid
      @PlasticCogLiquid Год назад +5

      I remember reading somewhere, a programmer said "IF ONLY THEY ADDED 1 MORE REGISTER!!" then everything would've been so much better. :P

    • @MaxAbramson3
      @MaxAbramson3 Год назад +3

      That's tragic, because the 68EC02/30 chips were only about $5-10 at that point and could've made the development of games much easier.

    • @ArneChristianRosenfeldt
      @ArneChristianRosenfeldt Год назад +1

      @@MaxAbramson3 don't they even have instruction cache? Together with the large register file on a 68k this would allow a lot of code to run without congesting the system bus or eating into JRISC cache.

    • @MaxAbramson3
      @MaxAbramson3 Год назад +1

      @@ArneChristianRosenfeldt The 68EC030 has a 256 byte ICache and a 256 bytes DCache. While those only manage a 50% hit rate on benchmarks, they can manage about 80% on gaming code thats written to take advantage of them.

    • @ArneChristianRosenfeldt
      @ArneChristianRosenfeldt Год назад

      @@MaxAbramson3 From an overall perspective, I would invest in the gaming code to run on JRISC and the rest to run on 68k. Still, 50% hit rate mean that the 68k can run 2 instructions before it has to wait for the bus and with 32bit it is twice as fast off the bus again.
      Still, I would rearrange the main board more like this: Tom in the center of the memory (like PS4). Small cartridge slot and associated area. Point2Point DDR connection to Jerry. And uh, a 6502 core inside Jerry as the friendly face. PCB would look as clean as the N64. I really don't see a path forward with a discrete 68k. 50% hit rate really isn't great, considering that Doom manages the JRISC cache so much better.
      I would rather invest into a package to remove the color conversation off Tom .. uh, but it is too small to justify a whole custom chip. Not like in the VGA days with the palette or the character ROM in MDA.

  • @gametourny4ever627
    @gametourny4ever627 3 года назад +19

    I just finished watching your N64, PS3, and now this episode. Great series! After you do the Saturn which is another great choice, I would love a video on the 32X and developing with that while still having the Bottleneck of the Genesis and if you jad the Sega Cd as well, what could be possible with all 3. That woukd be pretty fascinating.

    • @twh563
      @twh563 3 года назад +4

      The 32x would be great! Good idea.

  • @douglas9265
    @douglas9265 3 месяца назад

    That was a great video, I have a Jag and love to hear about the hardware and history of it. Right now I ordered an SCable and found an old flat screen TV. I am pumped about that and the fact that I can buy new games that run better, have save options and improve frames. Also, they have a lot of options of either buying a new controller or getting one custom made. All good things!

  • @Rocky1138
    @Rocky1138 3 года назад +11

    Excellent video. Another annoying issue is the fact that the act of the GPU processing its object list is destructive to the list, so it must be recreated every time you use it :(

  • @VPSantiago
    @VPSantiago 3 года назад +7

    This should be a project for CS students, would be better than my CS Architecture classes back two decades.

    • @ZygalStudios
      @ZygalStudios  3 года назад +2

      Funny, because my degree is in Electrical Engineering:)
      CS students don't typically like hardware stuff.

    • @Z3llix
      @Z3llix 3 года назад +1

      @@ZygalStudios Good point. This is the type of stuff we looked at in an embedded systems MSc, and that was hosted by the department of engineering. I took a CS BSc at the same University and nothing like this was covered. Excellent video btw!

  • @larrytron1992
    @larrytron1992 2 года назад +9

    I've always wanted to know how the Jaguar was put together and why it was so hard to develop for

  • @crazyivan030983
    @crazyivan030983 Год назад +1

    One bug here, one bug there, one bug for everyone everywhere... Bugmambo no 6 :D

  • @Ayrshore
    @Ayrshore 2 года назад +4

    Cool. I''ve got to get myself one of these Atari Jagwires to go with my Atari Jaguar. Good video. I knew these were awkward - just not how awkward. I had friends worked on some cool stuff on the 8 bit Ataris, there were some good tricks with those to improve things but it seems you needed something like those tricks just to make it work like it's supposed to. I had a friend import one of the very first ones (so early we had to solder the RGB cables onto the edge connector, we couldn't get a cable here) from the US to Scotland, and although it had a few great games, overall it was a huge disappointment.

  • @thegardner80
    @thegardner80 3 года назад +11

    I remember hearing at the time that if not for these hardware bugs the Jaguar would've been much more powerful. Someone (Minter?) said that one of the bugs caused texture mapping to take 11x as long as a plain ploygon, for example. Even as it was it was a worthy competitor for the 3DO, and not that much worse than the Saturn.

    • @thefurthestmanfromhome1148
      @thefurthestmanfromhome1148 3 года назад +5

      You might be thinking of Martin Brownlaw, coder of Missile Command 3D, not Jeff Minter.
      John Carmack also commented on how slow texture mapping was on Jaguar

  • @RISCGames
    @RISCGames 4 года назад +6

    Black Ice/White Noise held the highest promise IMO. Could have been grandbreaking for its time, GTA3 before GTA3.

  • @guaposneeze
    @guaposneeze 3 года назад +12

    This is probably the deepest dive video on the Jaguar anywhere on the Internet. I've always been curious about that beast, so thanks for that.
    That said, I feel like you are putting a lot of weight on pipeline stall and related issues. Anybody familiar with MIPS would have been pretty well versed in needing to throw in no-ops and arrange instructions to be pipeline friendly. And pretty much every gamedev in that area had to be somewhat familiar with MIPS, given it was used in the PS1 and N64. The odd mish mash of ISA's and bus sharing behavior was probably a much bigger issue. I feel like if you do a followup video, you should try to actually write some simple software for it. By the time you get all the various dev tools set up to do a build, you'll be weeping for something like an N64.

    • @ZygalStudios
      @ZygalStudios  3 года назад +3

      Thanks for the in depth comment! I appreciate it! So the 3DO and Jag were some of the first consoles to use RISC architectures. The high instruction throughput and scheduling issues were fairly new in the software development world at the time. IIRC, the Jaguar was the first (or one of the first) to use a MIPS processor (In a later Rev of hardware, no MIPS processors on the board originally.) specifically up until this point for a game console. So that was definitely a challenge. But yes, I do agree with you. The largest challenge was using the hardware to the fullest extent, as is with most of these consoles. And yes, as I mentioned, no real time debugger. But the PS1 and N64 were much different, more refined, mature, and more efficient. They also had much more resources for R&D and Nintendo had the best 3D hardware company in the world on their side, so these environments were much more mature and developer friendly. The Jaguar was not and that's definitely something to consider. Excellent points!

    • @jc_dogen
      @jc_dogen 2 года назад

      A series where James tries to write simple demos for all the systems he talks about would be Kino 👌

  • @thefurthestmanfromhome1148
    @thefurthestmanfromhome1148 2 года назад +2

    Credit has to go to developers who did use the hardware wisely and discover work arounds to get the best from it.
    Eclipse for discovering the small area of memory that could be used as a texture source and it was the same speed as flat and Gouraud shading (twice as fast as normal textures).
    ATD for using the GPU to get a better framerate and draw distance for Battlemorph over Cybermorph and ignoring Leonard Tramiel'S demands to fully texture-map the game.
    Rebellion for Skyhammer.
    Ubisoft for Rayman and showcasing the machines 2D abilities.

  • @sshrugg
    @sshrugg 2 года назад +1

    What a neat series!

  • @SonicBoone56
    @SonicBoone56 10 месяцев назад +2

    So in summary:
    Jaguar: Hardware bugs requiring wait states and screwing up regular commands
    Saturn: Too many processor subsystems with no easy way to access them all at once
    Both: Terrible first party development tools and documentation.

  • @RISCGames
    @RISCGames 4 года назад +19

    P.S. - when are you programming your first Jaguar game? ;-)

    • @ZygalStudios
      @ZygalStudios  4 года назад +13

      Haha, that's a good one ;) maybe I will take a look sometime in the future

    • @Tolbat
      @Tolbat 2 года назад

      @@ZygalStudios reach out to songbird productions for help

    • @tutoriais5266
      @tutoriais5266 2 года назад

      @@Tolbat Jaguar freaking sucks bro

  • @starcatdevocean19
    @starcatdevocean19 3 года назад +15

    Another thing worth mentioning is that the object processor needs a new object list every frame (50/60 Hz). So unless you buffer the list, fix the old one or create a new one, you end up with a corrupted list which will likely crash the OP. All of that requires other processors (68k, Tom or Jerry) to fix up a list. That CPU time could have been used otherwise. Also depending on how your object list is organized, performance can vary quite a bit. Not only the GPU/DSP have bugs. The blitter can be tricky to use. You need a processor to tell it what to do as well. There are so many other fun things to look out for. :) That being said, many consoles at the time had their peculiarities.

    • @ZygalStudios
      @ZygalStudios  3 года назад +2

      Yikes, sounds like a fun challenge though! :)

    • @korsibat
      @korsibat Год назад +1

      The object list had to be rebuilt every frame as it modified parts of it when processing objects. Chances are it would not corrupt the list but the objects Data and Height would get updated - so next time around it would be 0 pixels high - thus nothing to display

  • @BubblegumCrash332
    @BubblegumCrash332 4 года назад +17

    Great video I love this series!! All those great chips and devs just went for the familiar 6800 I guess that was Atari fault. It explains why so many Jaguar games didn't look 64 hell even 32 bit

    • @ZygalStudios
      @ZygalStudios  4 года назад +10

      Thank you! And yes, exactly!
      The architecture was phenomenal, but the manpower behind the design was small and the time was short. With more developers on the system, no doubt it would have done better. And yes, it definitely had an effect on the games. :)

    • @jerrycox9618
      @jerrycox9618 3 года назад +3

      I read somewhere back in the day the 68k was chosen to give developers a warm feeling when taking it on. I still love my Jaguar.

    • @Corsa15DT
      @Corsa15DT 3 года назад +1

      Like the Falcon, the Jaguar hasn't fullfilled its destiny. Hell even A1200 didn't show anything new or better than the A500. Developers probably jumped ship to PC

    • @so-vp2qh
      @so-vp2qh Год назад

      @@Corsa15DT accelerated a1200s could run doom

    • @Corsa15DT
      @Corsa15DT Год назад

      @@so-vp2qh if by accelerated you mean some vampire, then yes

  • @randyfemrite7525
    @randyfemrite7525 Месяц назад +2

    I remember Sam Tramiel saying "if the programmers aren't smart enough to figure out how to program for our machine we don't want them making games". That attitude didn't work to well....

    • @NitroDubzzz
      @NitroDubzzz 16 дней назад

      90% of videogame devs aren't much better than amateur programmers. We all showed pity over how hard it was to make games for the ps3 and now we have 100gb call of duty games.

  • @clover831
    @clover831 7 месяцев назад +1

    I would like to see a video on what you think about the canceled Panasonic M2 video game console. I really enjoyed this video, and the one about the Sega Saturn.👍

  • @franesustic988
    @franesustic988 3 года назад +10

    Amazing and in-depth! Great job. N64 had bottlenecks, ps3 was arcane, but this one is straight up bugged haha. No wonder it was left in the dust.
    ps. weird pronunciation, Jaguayer

    • @ZygalStudios
      @ZygalStudios  3 года назад +7

      Thank you!!!
      Should be 'Jag-U-Are' I suppose.

    • @robertfoxworthy5503
      @robertfoxworthy5503 3 года назад +1

      Its the North American pronunciation.

    • @Ayrshore
      @Ayrshore 2 года назад

      @@robertfoxworthy5503 so, the wrong one then.

    • @robertfoxworthy5503
      @robertfoxworthy5503 2 года назад +1

      @@Ayrshore the root word is from a south American

    • @Ayrshore
      @Ayrshore 2 года назад +1

      @@robertfoxworthy5503 Time the yanks learned to speak English.

  • @tangreen7267
    @tangreen7267 2 года назад +1

    Holy Crap ! I had no idea this system was so complicated !

  • @Waccoon
    @Waccoon 3 года назад +16

    To be fair, many systems of the early 90's were grappling with the concept of superscalar pipelining, and the Jaguar just had more problems than average. It was fashionable for companies to attempt an in-house RISC CPU back then, rather than license a well-tested core. In terms of system architecture, the Jaguar was actually quite nice, and the N64 and Saturn were both far more difficult to program.
    Also, *please* turn down the music, or at least use something less melodramatic.

    • @crazedlunatic43
      @crazedlunatic43 2 года назад +1

      Unlike those systems, the Jaguar's main chipsets were held back by bugs. If Atari had left it's development tool set and chipset a little longer in the oven like let's say, a delay for it's launch in 1994, that would've been preferred over an early launch with half baked tool and hardware designs.

  • @1337Shockwav3
    @1337Shockwav3 3 месяца назад

    Love the initial intro that the Jaguar had good hardware, but really was hell for developers from different angles. As a hardware enthusiast I've had to learn the hard way how important it is to properly document your stuff and make it as accessible as possible if you want people to use your stuff.

  • @ALM1GHTY.PEANUT
    @ALM1GHTY.PEANUT 2 месяца назад

    Great video! Background music was a bit too loud but awesome content!

  • @davidt3563
    @davidt3563 3 года назад

    Awesome video. Also I bet you could do an awesome impression of Robin from Teen Titans/GO.

    • @ZygalStudios
      @ZygalStudios  3 года назад

      Thank you!!
      Haven't heard that one before 🤣🤣 gonna have to look this up

  • @oxcellent
    @oxcellent 3 года назад +10

    This is easily one of the best Jaguar related videos I've seen on RUclips to date. Thank you so much for all the insights and facts rather then the usual folklore stories out there. Followed

    • @ZygalStudios
      @ZygalStudios  3 года назад +2

      Thanks for the feedback!
      No problem, it was a good time learning about it.
      I don't like engineering by storytelling, so being able to review this documentation, I prepared myself as if I was actually going to be writing a production game on it before I made this video.
      Comments like this are why I'm continuing to make video game hardware architecture videos, so thank you! No folklore here :)

  • @sulrich70
    @sulrich70 11 месяцев назад

    Good work

  • @axlcastellanoskuwae6733
    @axlcastellanoskuwae6733 3 года назад

    Excelent video!!

  • @JeffersonHumber
    @JeffersonHumber 4 года назад +2

    Great video, I remember this console well from my youth. Question, could the hardware bugs of been corrected with a BIOS patch?

    • @ZygalStudios
      @ZygalStudios  4 года назад +13

      Hey Jefferson,
      So unfortunately no. The hardware itself had faults in the processor design and the UART hardware did too.
      This is cast into the dies and cannot be changed unless you physically rework and redesign the board.

  • @Corsa15DT
    @Corsa15DT 3 года назад +7

    Nobody knows the 68000 from the Mac, it is known from the Amiga and the Atari.

    • @watchm4ker
      @watchm4ker 3 года назад +3

      And the Mega Drive / Genesis

    • @Corsa15DT
      @Corsa15DT 3 года назад

      @@watchm4ker oh yes, many console used it and almost all of the arcade machines, but I was referring to home computers only.

    • @watchm4ker
      @watchm4ker 3 года назад

      @@Corsa15DT Oh. Sharp X68000

    • @Corsa15DT
      @Corsa15DT 3 года назад

      @@watchm4ker yes, the X68000 is a great machine, but it was not a commercial success, very few sold...

    • @watchm4ker
      @watchm4ker 3 года назад

      @@Corsa15DT Not massively successful, no, since it never left Japan, but it lasted until 93 and had numerous models made.

  • @zorromagico4534
    @zorromagico4534 2 года назад +2

    Is funny how everyone is focusing on your way to say GaeWare but i appreciate the entire video

    • @ZygalStudios
      @ZygalStudios  2 года назад

      Lol hey it's fair game 🤣
      Thank you for the support!

  • @mcopanzan
    @mcopanzan 2 года назад

    Looks like Jag went from from a headache to a full blown migrane.

  • @SoulforSale
    @SoulforSale 3 года назад +5

    Where did you learn to fly?

  • @lelsewherelelsewhere9435
    @lelsewherelelsewhere9435 2 года назад +1

    14:28 I wonder if this is a flaw of divide-scoreboard itself were maybe divide-read isn't considered a read by the scoreboard, thus the first divide isn't scoreboarded first (or at all), so second divide can occur falsely.
    This makes the previous bug, of divide needing a dummy wait, make sense, as divide isn't viewed as doing a read by scoreboard and so is ignored by scoreboard.
    If divide is too long between reading and execution, the scoreboard may see some weird, null, intentionally placed wait (to account for long divide time, divide may include a built in dummy wait statement) operation occuring. But a "dummy wait ending with divide result being stored" instruction doesn't contain a read, is seen as a dummy, thus the scoreboard treats this end of divide, and so the whole divide itself, differently and ignores it.

  • @MrChuckGrape
    @MrChuckGrape 3 года назад

    Angry dachshund? Now you're speaking my language!

  • @ravingrays248
    @ravingrays248 6 месяцев назад

    To quote scotty from star trek 3 "the more they overthink the plumbing the easier it is to stuff up the drain"

  • @KarlHamilton
    @KarlHamilton 2 года назад

    Excellent video, that really was a deep dive! Tell me, are these kind of flaws/bugs present in other systems too or is the Jaguar just bad for these? Cheers!

    • @SianaGearz
      @SianaGearz 2 года назад +2

      There is no system without 'errata', hardware bugs that have been documented and just remain unfixed. Every PC has several thousand of these bugs, with corresponding workarounds in the system software and drivers - the workaround doesn't mean the hardware needs to be detected explicitly, nor do the workarounds usually limit performance, but the errata impose a particular order of doing things. On modern systems, these plentiful errata are low severity and are well hidden by the thicc system software, so on the application side, you don't need to be aware of them.
      PS2 has a few notorious errata, like WHO IN THEIR RIGHT MIND designed the interlacing flicker filter as 1:1 instead of 1:2:1? This is just so useless, makes for a jumpy and blurry image, so games didn't even bother using it. There is something wrong with edge rule on PS1 and MIP selection rules on many systems, and you can trip out the graphics chips in most systems a little bit when approaching numerical limits even when at a glance it looks like you might have some latitude. Odd little bits of weirdness. And of course peripheral device weirdness is pretty much expected, but nothing particularly detrimental, like there is a way of doing what you need to do, and robustly.
      However there's exactly a reason nobody, and i mean absolutely nobody, in their right mind, designs the high complexity main programmable processors themselves if they can help it. License existing logic. Leave it to a company who has a lineup of CPUs or DSPs already going and have them make at most minor alterations. Like one of the main things you do is assess risks, and try to make utter engineering fiasco as unlikely as possible. Jaguar went with self-designed chips which are de facto the main processors of the system.
      Jaguar brings the bugginess to a completely unprecedented and absurd level. It's right on the knife's edge where if it was just a tiny bit buggier, it couldn't have booted at all, and honestly no other company, not even Atari in a better functioning state, could have deemed the Jag even as it stands now releasable. You don't generally find errata which make the system borderline useless or eat up pretty much all of its performance. Of course design fitness varies - many systems don't reach as much performance in real uses as they seem to on paper, but then that's just generally due to almost inevitable compromises or the fundamental uncertainty as to what the actual usage of the system will be like.
      Microcontrollers, CPUs and DSPs that you can buy for your product or project actually all come with errata sheets in the documentation, and even comparatively simple ones have quite extensive ones, and you really need to consider errata in the system design, as some of them can be limiting as to how you design the system, some of them can actually hurt. And their designers actually know what they're doing and they have iterations upon iterations under the belt, so to an extent this is inevitable. But it's a million times better you design against errata that you know, than against ones you don't.

  • @Tolbat
    @Tolbat 2 года назад +2

    This is the only console whose rights were released to the public, no one has taken advantage of this.

  •  4 года назад +6

    Makes you wonder why they stuck a 68k in there instead of a PowerPC or a MIPS like the Cojag arcade board used

    • @ZygalStudios
      @ZygalStudios  4 года назад +3

      My guess is cost. One of the major things that the project was marketed towards Sega as was the cost. The other two processors (Tom and Jerry), were also Motorola chips. If they purchased an older 68000 along with the other two custom chips, they'd be able to save a large amount of cost due to volume. Plus, the 68k was a pretty well known system at the time, so they'd be able to market it that way to developers.

    • @maroon9273
      @maroon9273 4 года назад +2

      @@ZygalStudios the m68k20 would have been better and work well with Jag coprocessor than the 68k.

    • @erikkarsies4851
      @erikkarsies4851 3 года назад

      @@maroon9273 Motorola wasn't keen on mass producing the 68k20 or 68k30 for the cheap price needed for the Jaguar or even other Atari desktops computers. That would have ruined their lucrative workstation and server markets. I don't know if they even could produce it that cheap, but these cpu's would made more possible for the Jaguar and it would have been hold back the customn chips less. Hell... it was designed for the 68k20. I still get annoyed by people calling it the general purpose processor. It was the central processing unit which limited so many things like the total amount of memory in the cartridge, the limited complexicity of the development tools (because of the lack of memory management) and efficient control of the customn chips to name a few.
      Basically at that time Atari hadn't the creditibillity anymore to get big company's like Motorola really backing them up and not the capital to do stuff without them.

    • @maroon9273
      @maroon9273 3 года назад

      @@erikkarsies4851 lowest cost 68k20 was the ec which is a cut down version of the CPU. I don't how much it cost during the development of the jaguar hardware.

    • @thefurthestmanfromhome1148
      @thefurthestmanfromhome1148 3 года назад

      @@ZygalStudios cost and as John Maitheson explained, they wanted to put something in there that people were familiar with.
      Atari were keen to use a 68K family device, and we looked closely at various members. We did actually build a couple of 68030 versions of the early beta developers systems, and for a while were going to use a 68020. However, this turned out too expensive. We also considered the possibility of no [Motorola 680x0 chip] at all. I always felt it was important to have some normal processor, to give developers a warm feeling when they start.
      The 68K is inexpensive and does that job well.
      - John Mathieson

  • @hugoace1
    @hugoace1 3 года назад +8

    Dumb non-programmer question: Instead of workarounds, what would it take to actually FIX these bugs? A redesign and manufacture of chips? I don't know anything about programming but it just sounds like no one will ever be able to use the hardware's full potential.

    • @ZygalStudios
      @ZygalStudios  3 года назад +4

      Not a dumb question at all!
      Most of these bugs would require new hardware spins, which is definitely not ideal from a cost standpoint. This also means in some cases that software developed on old chips is not compatible with the new hardware either.

    • @thefurthestmanfromhome1148
      @thefurthestmanfromhome1148 3 года назад +5

      @@ZygalStudios at the time, Rob Nicholoson of Handmade Software said the Jaguar chipset needed a further 2 revisions to fix the bugs alone.

    • @FantasyVisuals
      @FantasyVisuals 2 года назад +2

      The Jaguar GPU had 4kb of internal nonwait RAM , due to a bug , you had to write everything in 4kb chunks. They could not change it to 64kb of normal ram as the design was complete.
      The system had countless design faults.

  • @zbdot73
    @zbdot73 Год назад +2

    It be really interesting if a programmable logic array was used to model the jaguars chip(s) but with most of these bugs worked out and to see how fast this chipset could have been at the released Mhz rating. Essentially making one more revision to the silicon which is evident being needed. Also was this rush to market driven by marketing or dollars running out for the company?

    • @vidjenko8349
      @vidjenko8349 9 месяцев назад +1

      Cool idea and yes. They pulled it out of the oven too soon due to Atari rapidly bleeding money at the time.

  • @HeathenDeluxe
    @HeathenDeluxe 2 года назад

    Good content

  • @Paul29Esx
    @Paul29Esx 3 года назад

    Jag - you - are!

  • @inigomontoya4198
    @inigomontoya4198 2 года назад

    Cool video

  • @mylessmith8980
    @mylessmith8980 2 года назад +5

    The Atari Jaguar was like a system from the future way ahead of its time.

    • @VOAN
      @VOAN Год назад

      There's really nothing ahead of its time about the Jaguar, a lot of its games are just worst versions of either PC or console games of the time. Even the Super NES and Sega Genesis had better 3D capabilities than Jaguar. Companies need to know that games are made to be play, not to be look at. A lot of Jaguar intend was to just make games that are good to look at regardless how they play and this is why not everyone wanted to buy one.

  • @timothypeters7160
    @timothypeters7160 3 года назад +2

    Love your channel...please do the atomiswave...or the neo geo pocket...thx

    • @ZygalStudios
      @ZygalStudios  3 года назад +1

      Thank you!!!
      Planning on doing both :)
      Thanks for stopping by!

  • @Jolly-Green-Steve
    @Jolly-Green-Steve 6 месяцев назад

    Trying to make a game for this thing seems a lot like Sully following you in the parking garage. From here it looks like a nightmare.

  • @Tolbat
    @Tolbat Год назад

    Zygal my friend, we are still waiting on you to make a Jaguar game sir.

  • @crazedlunatic43
    @crazedlunatic43 2 года назад +2

    A delayed launch to ensure that the chipset's hardware bugs have been fixed, and Atari providing proper development tools over pushing the system for a '93 launch would've been preferred.

    • @thefurthestmanfromhome1148
      @thefurthestmanfromhome1148 2 года назад

      Rob Nicholson of Handmade Software, said the chipsets needed another 2 revisions, just to get the bugs out.

    • @watchm4ker
      @watchm4ker Год назад +3

      Atari didn't have the money. Any revisions to the hardware would have meant cooking up more silicon, which was millions upon millions of dollars per revision, at a time where Atari Games hadn't seen success since the Crash.

    • @ArneChristianRosenfeldt
      @ArneChristianRosenfeldt Год назад

      show me any bug which does not need more transistors ( and potentially more bugs ) to solve. Feature creep is the problem. All those special JRISC instructions for JPEG and mp3! Multilevel interrupts on all 3 processors! Two audio DACs ( why not stick to external from the start ? ). Complicated backwards compatibility to Atari controllers instead of simpler Japanese design. Vertical scaling should never have been done by the OP. Why can the blitter scan for values, but at an unusable slow pace? Why do we have OP and blitter? Really, the Jaguar needs one simple 64 bit memcopy unit with access to the bus and then one pixel pusher with private memory. Bringing a 16 or 32 bit framebuffer to the screen is just a matter of memcopy. Don't confuse it with sprite or palette or scaling or shadows, all of which are too slow for the memory bandwidth. The OP already has its own (private) linebuffer and palette. Just unify it with the blitter . Who ever needs this exploding pixel mode of the blitter? Why have to relearn everything when going from 2d to 3d? Why 32bit cartridge if the clock rate is too low and the bits too expensive for live data anyway? Who needs more than a pi/2 cos table in DSP ROM?

  • @linkovitch
    @linkovitch 3 года назад +5

    I think you have misunderstood the JUMP recommendations.. you certainly don't have to prefix a JUMP with NOPs, and you don't HAVE to postfix them with NOPs either, but you do need to be aware of them with the pipelining. As the instruction after the jump will be loaded into the pipeline before the jump is executed (hence the suggestion of using a NOP after), but there is nothing to stop you adding an instruction immediately after a JUMP as long as it is contained within the 16bits of an instruction (no MOVEI's), and a few other gotchas (Indexed offsets go boom :D ).
    I use instructions after a JUMP quite a lot in my code on the Jag and it works without issue. Obviously these are jumps in SRAM, I don't bother with any of the GPU in Main crazyness, life's too short.

    • @ZygalStudios
      @ZygalStudios  3 года назад +2

      Now remind me, is this the jump recommendations I reference around 13:50?
      Or is it somewhere else? Either way thank you for pointing that out and commenting! :)

    • @ZygalStudios
      @ZygalStudios  3 года назад +1

      Just kidding I see it at 12:19!
      You're right! Thank you. Just an effect of pipeline systems! :D

    • @linkovitch
      @linkovitch 3 года назад +2

      @@ZygalStudios Don't know if you came across it or not, it is touched on in the Tech Manual (there are at least 3 versions of that, each with it's own extras and corrections, the one dated 1995 I think is the most complete), but the "Jaguar" part of the system is just Tom & Jerry with an additional generic general CPU. In the Arcade versions of the system, the 68K is replaced with either a 68030 or an R3K or R4K, as well as increased ROM size and DSP bus connection being full 32bit.

    • @ZygalStudios
      @ZygalStudios  3 года назад

      @@linkovitch Did not know about the different hardware in the cabs! That's neat they used a MIPS CPU :) smart move on that one and actual 64-bit

    • @RayR
      @RayR 2 года назад +1

      @@linkovitch the Cojag cpu hardware is a 68EC020 or R3K.. no R4K.

  • @theannoyedmrfloyd3998
    @theannoyedmrfloyd3998 3 года назад +7

    The Jag Gwar was hard to develop for because most developers used IBM PC based SDK. If you really wanted to tap its true potential, you needed an Atari TT030 computer.
    It's not pronounced 'Jag Gwire.'

    • @ZygalStudios
      @ZygalStudios  3 года назад +6

      Did the JAG-U-ARE have a SDK for the Atari TT030?
      If not, this would appear to make the task of development more difficult.
      The SDK/Environment cannot mask the system architecture bottlenecks and hardware bugs, which, overwhelmingly, were the main issues with it.

    • @Sinn0100
      @Sinn0100 2 года назад +1

      You know words are pronounced differently across cultures right? What he said was absolutely correct. It is pronounced 'Jag Gwire' here in the states. Just as we wouldn't be caught dead saying something as ridiculous as "Zedbra." Thank you and have a pleasant week.

    • @polytrashed
      @polytrashed Год назад +1

      @@Sinn0100 Uhhh, not in any of the states I’ve ever been in, lmao 😂

    • @Sinn0100
      @Sinn0100 Год назад

      @@polytrashed
      I've been to every state in the Union and not one time have I heard anyone pronounce Jaguar like British people. If you want to hear the most common way a word is spoken look at Television or film as they tend to match the most popular or frequently used dialect...especially commercials advertising a product. One example of this is the Atari Jaguar commercials that ran from 1993-1996. I encourage you to look it up as it will show you the correct pronunciation here in the states.
      Before you tell me the UK this or that...remember, every country has its way of doing things. We might all predominantly speak "English" but it is not the same as "English" in the UK. Often times their words have different meanings than ours do and spelling can be radically different. Just look at the word color and colour. Both mean the same thing but are spelled completely different. This phenomenon is very prevalent in Spanish speaking countries as well. Spanish in Spain is very different than Spanish from Puerto Rico.

    • @polytrashed
      @polytrashed Год назад +3

      @@Sinn0100 What? I think there’s been a misunderstanding; everywhere I’ve been it’s been pronounced “jag-gwar” (similar to “bar”), while the stereotypical English version is the three-syllable variant “jag-yew-are”… but never before today have I heard it pronounced it as “jag-wire” lol

  • @roxynano
    @roxynano 3 года назад +14

    I do not know most of the jargon you were saying but it is still extremely interesting! Honestly I would love to watch more and see if I’m able to learn.
    I’m intrigued on Jaguar games that actually achieved the hardwares true potential.

    • @BHGMediaGroup
      @BHGMediaGroup 3 года назад +1

      I don't know if there are any that TRULY did reach full hardware potential. One thing thought that I find interesting is that if you look at the two games that were on every system at the time, NBA Jam TE and Doom, it's the Jaguar versions that are regarded as being the best, even better than PS1 and Saturn versions. So who knows what could've been with the Jaguar.

    • @roxynano
      @roxynano 3 года назад

      @@BHGMediaGroup Who knows?

    • @BHGMediaGroup
      @BHGMediaGroup 3 года назад +2

      @@roxynano I think the one thing that could be telling is that there's still a fairly large group of homebrew developers that make new games that you can buy on Atariage, but those also don't showcase the full power, most of them not even coming close to what was already commercially available, so after all this time, homebrew coders can't figure out how to squeeze out the full power, it was unlikely anybody was.

    • @AP-mw9oj
      @AP-mw9oj 2 года назад +1

      I know this would be a super late reply, but there wasn't much in the way of "2nd (or 3rd) generation" software for the system, which successful consoles get, and beyond of teams producing 2/3/4+ games for the same system. John Carmack, who coded Wolf 3D and Doom for the Jaguar, did say that if he had done Doom again, there are several things that he would have done differently and more efficiently, so it's safe to assume that had they done Doom II, it would have been better than the Doom port was.
      That all said, the best examples of what the Jaguar could do were: Iron Soldier II, BattleSphere, Wolf 3D, Super Burnout, Doom, Missile Command 3D, Zero 5, Skyhammer, BattleMorph, NBA Jam, Tempest 2000, Alien Vs. Predator, Hover Strike CD, Tube SE, and Primal Rage. There was also some unreleased games that showed off some near-PSX potential, such as BlackICE/White Noise, Phear (which actually became Tetrisphere on the N64), Phaze Zero, Native, Conan, and the AtariOwl RPG game. :)

    • @roxynano
      @roxynano 2 года назад +1

      @@AP-mw9oj Will note! Thank you for the late reply!

  • @dmblan82
    @dmblan82 3 года назад +1

    Were there any games that took advantage of the Jaguar's system? Have there been any from the homebrew scene that push the system?

    • @ZygalStudios
      @ZygalStudios  3 года назад +4

      AVP stands out I would say per the time period and same with Missile Command 3D.
      As far as homebrew is concerned, I'm sure there have been some too!

    • @thefurthestmanfromhome1148
      @thefurthestmanfromhome1148 3 года назад +1

      @@ZygalStudios AVP, Iron Solider 1 and 2, Battlesphere, Skyhammer, Rayman.. Zero 5..
      Probably the best examples of Jaguar hardware being used wisely, maybe Battlemorph as well.

  • @leonardharris9678
    @leonardharris9678 Год назад +1

    it could still do good graphics, its other hold back was the cartridge, i saw article talking with Rebellion software who did the game Alien vs Predator, which was a nice looking game and they said specifically, that they cut back on the texture quality considerably, due to having to cram it on a cartridge

    • @thefurthestmanfromhome1148
      @thefurthestmanfromhome1148 11 месяцев назад

      And they had to practically beg the Tramiel's to increase the cartridge size over the original allocated size.
      A full orchestral musical score was intended for the title, but no room for it on the final cartridge.

    • @ArneChristianRosenfeldt
      @ArneChristianRosenfeldt 10 месяцев назад

      @@thefurthestmanfromhome1148with music you mean: wavetable?

  • @SamMcDonald83
    @SamMcDonald83 3 года назад +5

    Extremely interesting analysis. I recall hearing on a podcast awhile ago that John Carmack was a fan of the Jaguar. So much so that he coded up Doom for it in a weekend. In fact, the Jaguar port remains the only version made by ID Software themselves in that era.
    I also seem to remember that Carmack flagged up the register bug you mentioned and was able to code a fix. However supposedly, if those issues were not present, the Jaguar could have been close to a PS1 in respect to performance.

    • @Ehal256
      @Ehal256 3 года назад

      I'm pretty sure that Carmack also worked on the 32X port of Doom.

    • @SamMcDonald83
      @SamMcDonald83 3 года назад +2

      @@Ehal256 the only console port made by ID themselves was the Jaguar one, which supposedly Carmack coded personally.
      The other ports were all handled by third party companies which is why the quality varied so much.
      Actually over the years several programmers of these ports have come out and discussed their experiences. One of the most netorious ports was for the 3DO and its lead programmer, Rebecca Heineman has discussed at length the challenges she faced ruclips.net/video/rBbIil2HPSU/видео.html
      Similarly the programmer for the Sega Saturn version has gone on record that his port was so bad because Carmack refused to let him use the Saturn's GPU doom.fandom.com/wiki/Sega Saturn
      Finally on a more positive note the programmer of the snes version, who managed to rewtite the game in assembler, has discussed his more pleasant experience : ruclips.net/video/P5PknJvplKg/видео.html

    • @robertfoxworthy5503
      @robertfoxworthy5503 3 года назад

      They all used the Jags source code.

    • @SamMcDonald83
      @SamMcDonald83 3 года назад

      @@robertfoxworthy5503 ok so what's your point?

    • @robertfoxworthy5503
      @robertfoxworthy5503 3 года назад +1

      @@SamMcDonald83 nothing just that it is the code base for all other Ports.

  • @paulwestphal7336
    @paulwestphal7336 Год назад

    Please do a video on the NUON system.

  • @Skullkan6
    @Skullkan6 3 года назад +1

    Could you go into how this affected the programming of Jaguar Doom?
    Carmack has been quoted as saying "Coding for the Jaguar is fun!"
    And nobody at id wanted to work on it. So basically only he and Sandy Petersen ended up working on Jaguar doom.

    • @thefurthestmanfromhome1148
      @thefurthestmanfromhome1148 3 года назад +5

      John Romero and Dave Taylor also worked on Jaguar Doom, but they weren't fans of the hardware, Taylor in particular

  • @Darth001
    @Darth001 3 года назад

    Got a sub from me. Went and watched some of your other videos and it's seems the music I'm this video overtakes your voice at time where in other videos it's fine. I'd like you to do next iver the 3do console and or the 32x addon

    • @ZygalStudios
      @ZygalStudios  3 года назад +1

      Funny enough, the 32x was my last console based video a few weeks back. Stay tuned for the 3DO! :)

    • @Darth001
      @Darth001 3 года назад

      @@ZygalStudios brill i will check it out and keep up the good work

  • @MrSnapy1
    @MrSnapy1 11 дней назад

    Most games just ran on the 68000 which is why many games looked 16 bit because it was.

  • @randyfemrite7525
    @randyfemrite7525 Месяц назад

    Alien vs. Predator and SkyHammer are excellent proof of what could have been. Apparently some programmers/developers/game designers knew what to do. Battlemorph and Hoverstrike also...did I miss anything?

  • @SerdceDanko
    @SerdceDanko Год назад +1

    I miss these times of unique custom hardware, nowadays its all the same.

    • @chloemarietaylor4036
      @chloemarietaylor4036 4 месяца назад

      I guess Atari much like Sega with the Saturn approached it as arcade developers where the boards were often cutting edge, expensive and modular ie separate systems joined together. It took Sony entering without this pattern of working to apply corporate minimal viable product to it. Sega tried to make the Saturn great at absolutely everything, Sony said just make it do 3d simply. Sadly this corporate mentality has homegenised all consoles to be near identical, basically scaled down pcs. I miss the old days where systems had a character of their own, the Saturn with its quad polygons, the ps1 with its quirky integer use, the n64 with its muddy anti-aliasing. While hardware is arguably much better these days as you'd expect you only have to go the gamestore app on the device to realise it is 95% crap and 99% identical across the 3 big systems.

  • @Tolbat
    @Tolbat 2 года назад

    Ahh yes, so you have a very in depth understanding of this, what would it take to make a clone console of this system?

  • @KungKras
    @KungKras 3 года назад

    Was it really that Tom tried to implement hazard detection and failed, or was it that it used pipelining but no hazard detection?

    • @ZygalStudios
      @ZygalStudios  3 года назад

      There were no bugs with this. If there were, the processor wouldn't have even gotten off the ground. It had hardware to detect hazards and then register scoreboarding logic to correct when a pipeline stall occurred.
      The purpose of explaining this was to show some of the design challenges in assembly that you would have as a programmer.

  • @rockyroad90
    @rockyroad90 3 года назад +1

    So what would you say caused the “Hardware Bugs” : The design or the manufacture?
    I ask this because I find most quick to jump on Atari on the lack of dev support for the complex and/or flawed system but NEVER, to my knowledge, place any responsibility on the manufacturer IBM.

    • @ZygalStudios
      @ZygalStudios  3 года назад +2

      Well Flare Technology was contracted to design it. So it would be on them for sure. But it was really just two guys and they designed this within just a couple years, so it makes sense. 2 guys designing this system with just a couple years of development explains why it was just functional and didn't have any pomp and frills.
      But if we're talking specifically, Atari contracted resources for the project, they are certainly responsible for the lack of resources.

    • @rockyroad90
      @rockyroad90 3 года назад +2

      @@ZygalStudios
      Thanks for the response. But I remember an interview with one of the Flare team in which, to paraphrase, someone asked him why did they chose assem. Instead of C for coding and what John Carmack say about scratchpad memory and no virtualization in the blitter? To which he replied that it was supposed to have those thing but there were defects in the hardware( he may have said silicon) and he blamed the Tramels for rushing the project.
      My point is Atari made mistakes their’s no doubt but if there was a defect in the manufacturing process then that is on IBM.

  • @antayat
    @antayat 4 месяца назад

    Great research dude! It really is too bad that Atari shipped this system with inherent bugs. It's my understanding that they rushed this thing out the door as a hail marry to save the company. Not realizing the bugs.
    There is a 2600 game that builds a unique map per each play. No one has access to the pre compiled data. No one knows how it was accomplished. Even the original programmer forgot the algorithm that he derived at.
    Might be a neat puzzle to look into even though it's not really hardware related.

  • @johnjay6370
    @johnjay6370 2 года назад +3

    Good Video, I always wondered about the bugs in the hardware that John Carmack talked about. Saying that, I think the bugs were NOT a show stopper for the hardware. Yes they are an issue and will slow things down for development, but if all the bugs are flagged and addressed, i do think the Jag had some clever ideas. I had one back in the day and DOOM , AVP, and Iron Soldier were some good games.

  • @hggfhh4449
    @hggfhh4449 11 месяцев назад

    Is the jaguar graphically better than the game boy Advance?

  • @garethbeaton8414
    @garethbeaton8414 Год назад

    I was only kid that had one in 90s I just wanted doom AVP but no pc 😢 so jaguar it was I don't know price wich I keept it

  • @misterbean971
    @misterbean971 Год назад +1

    The music is loud enough to drown out your otherwise perfect explanation.

  • @VOAN
    @VOAN Год назад

    These complicated hardware is why Doom in Jaguar can't have music in the actual level. Instead you either get sounds with better graphics or you have audio but only in fix screen such as the title and result screen only.

    • @ArneChristianRosenfeldt
      @ArneChristianRosenfeldt Год назад +1

      did you check the ROM-hack which corrects this? Does it slow down Doom? Doom crams some game logic and engine stuff together with the wavetable code into the tiny 8 kB of the DSP.

  • @JunkerDC
    @JunkerDC Год назад

    poor further ado he never gets to go any where

    • @ZygalStudios
      @ZygalStudios  Год назад +1

      This one took me a good minute to understand 🤣🤣 I love this.
      Good one!

  • @METAL1ON
    @METAL1ON Год назад

    What's a Jagwire?

  • @soccerojdoj
    @soccerojdoj Год назад

    The biggest bug on the Atari Jaguar? All the experts I've heard pronounce the Atari Jaguar "The Atari JagWIRE"...lol

  • @finaltheorygames1781
    @finaltheorygames1781 2 года назад +1

    Just remember that nobody cares about a console if there is no software for it. The reason why people loved the NES and SNES was because those machines had great games and people loves those games. The Atari Jaguar just didn't have any super amazing games that would have allowed it to push those console units. This doesn't mean that you can't develop great games for the console. It also doesn't mean that the console itself isn't any good. It just means that at the time 1993-1996 the Jaguar didn't have enough killer software apps to gain interest and to make it a success. Remember how Halo put the original Xbox on the map. The Jaguar needed some killer software and it just didn't have it. This is also why hardware is nothing without software.

  • @TDMicrodork
    @TDMicrodork 2 года назад

    At cost jack trammel ears kicked up their probably how he fell for it.

  • @TheSocialGamer
    @TheSocialGamer 3 года назад +2

    When did the JAG-WIRE come out? I only ever heard of the Jaguar? 🤣🤣🤣

    • @ZygalStudios
      @ZygalStudios  3 года назад +1

      Oh you didn't hear, it came out last year 🤣🤣

  • @demonology2629
    @demonology2629 2 года назад +1

    Wish you could have showed us some of the games that had terrible problems with these bugs 🕹🐆📺

    • @korsibat
      @korsibat Год назад +1

      The games were written with the bugs in mind so the programmers worked around them.

  • @kusumayogi7956
    @kusumayogi7956 2 года назад +1

    Ive Heard that jaguar is still using 16bit cpu and only GPU and sound processor are 32bit(combine with 64bit bus memory)
    That sound like combine rtx GPU with Intel atom cpu.
    Also they said, cpu do nothing only give command to GPU and sound processor. All process are done by GPU and sound processor. Sound like science fiction to me.

    • @humansrants1694
      @humansrants1694 Год назад

      One of the main processors is also supposed to be the main CPU and its 32bit with some 64bit processors most devs used the 16bit Motorolla 68000 as the main CPU as it was easier to work with.

  • @atomicskull6405
    @atomicskull6405 Год назад +1

    With some good middlewear the Jaguar could have done some amazing 2D games like platformers and the like. It was never going to compete with the likes of the Saturn and Playstation though.
    I've always thought that they should have just released the Panther in 91 to compete with the Megadrive and SNES tried to build up a stable of third party developers and put the Jaguar on the back burner. People always say "oh but the Panther doesn't compare to the Jaguar" and no it didn't but it still exceeded the 2D arcade PCBs of the late 80's and early 90's and was easier to write software for than the Jaguar which was good enough.
    The mid to late 90s were a dark time for video games comparable to the "iron age" of comics. If you showed someone beautiful pixel art vs ugly blocky 3D of that time 9 out of 10 people would prefer the 3D.

    • @ArneChristianRosenfeldt
      @ArneChristianRosenfeldt Год назад

      What would the middleware do what the SDK does not? Tile based background? Box2d collision and physics? Did people need this middleware on 16-bit consoles? Better audio driver?

    • @atomicskull6405
      @atomicskull6405 Год назад

      @@ArneChristianRosenfeldt From what I have read the Jaguar SDK was terrible and didn't make it any easier to develop for. an middelware would give you a software framework to start with with all the heavy ASM lifting done already.

    • @ArneChristianRosenfeldt
      @ArneChristianRosenfeldt Год назад

      @@atomicskull6405 the Framework did not even give a printf . I think that this is called C stdlib. People complain that the compiler did not check for overflow. I did not know that C can throw this exception. I don’t understand how to overflow 32bit. Much bigger problem is that factors need to be 16 bit. Probably, if OP would not be able to write to DRAM, development would have an easier start. Middleware to draw a background from tiles would be nice.

    • @thefurthestmanfromhome1148
      @thefurthestmanfromhome1148 11 месяцев назад

      According to Atari uk, had Panther been released, there would only of been around a 9 month window, before Jaguar was ready.
      People who worked on the Panther, like Jeff Minter, Rob Nicholson from HMS etc, stated the actual sprite abilities weren't anything like the numbers Atari were pushing.

  • @cresshead
    @cresshead Год назад

    'jag-wire ..... um .... no it's jag -u-ar