limi wrote: ↑Sat Oct 26, 2024 9:53 am
markpaterson wrote: ↑Sat Oct 26, 2024 3:14 am
I'm not using AmigaVision. Nothing against it, I just like to have my own Amiga installation.
Hello from AmigaVision, let’s see if we can help you get there anyway
…
If you just want to optimize for Settlers, you can probably get there through a combination of doing some math and adjusting the aspect ratio in the MiSTer menu (you can specify custom ones in the .ini
file in the Amiga section), keeping your monitor at 1280×1024, and then using the Adjust Screen Position in the Amiga core menu. I recommend showing a fullscreen 1×1px checkerboard image on the screen when you attempt this, so you can see when the pixels are not lining up.
This is not a fun task, and it took us a long time to get it right too, but it can be done.
The downside is that the settings for Settlers are probably not correct for other games, which is why we had to build infrastructure to handle that in AmigaVision.
Hi Limi! Thank you for graciously offering some detailed help here, and of course thank you for your herculean efforts with AmigaVision.
I used an online ratio calculator and determined that the Settlers resolution (according to MiSTer, 356x280) is 89:70. I plugged that in to the ini and it still doesn't look right. The Settlers intro screen has some useful checker boarding on it to verify, such as the sky area, and the 45 degree diagonal lines on the shields in the corners.
This might all be a lost cause. I bought the Dell P1914S IPS a couple days ago as an Amazon renewed product for around $80, specifically for use with the Amiga core LOL. I just assumed that the 5:4 aspect ratio would fit perfectly with the Amiga screen mode of 640x512 and 320x256, not understanding that the core sends the overscan too, and is unable to crop it. My own dumb ignorance. Shame, because the monitor is in fantastic condition, no dead pixels, not a single scratch on the panel. I may return it, I don't really have another use for it, and it's too low resolution to use as a secondary monitor for my Mac.
I've since ordered this ViewSonic 15.6" OLED (16x9, 1920x1080) https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BJXRZ5C6?re ... sin_title , which will find dual use on my desk, aiding me in my animation and post production work.
I will likely return to using AmigaVision on the new OLED, however the only reason I drifted away from AmigaVision is that I find its Workbench environment quite bare bones. I totally understand why – it is beyond the scope of AmigaVision to provide a fully stocked Workbench too. And I'm not sure I would want a bloated OS either.
For me, Workbench is a big part of the Amiga experience. I'm an OG user from the 90s. I had no internet back then, so between gaming time, I'd spend hours just tinkering with Workbench, installing utilities and apps from Amiga Format cover disks or Aminet CDs. Hence why I get a kick out of "rolling my own" Workbench.
I still see great value in your work though, and all its MiSTer customizations. So is it possible to "transplant" AmigaVision (the launcher and the game drive) to my own Workbench environment? Or, would it be safer and easier to upgrade the AmigaVision Workbench (perhaps to 3.2.2.1 using my own disk images) restoring it to a more standard Workbench environment that I can build upon, thereby having the best of both worlds?
edit – to clarify, I would want it to boot into Workbench first, and then I would launch AmigaVision from the desktop icon.