

#HOW DO I CHANGE THE MAC START UP TO VERBOSE IN MAME EMULATOR SOFTWARE#
Even for MAME and IIGS emulation you can leave as ZIP for simple one disk software but when you get into multiple floppy disks or "A and B" side floppies, unzipping is easiest and the least confusing (to me). Zip files are great and for most emulators you can leave them as is. I assume you have access to MAME software for the IIGS, ideally the Software List MAME dump. They also emulate that complexity.ĭon't expect within LB to import a whole slug of 1,000s of pieces of software and expect to work out of the box.

Setting up computer emulator, particularly the Apple II, MSDOS generations, is not near as simple as consoles/arcade some of which is due to the very computers they are emulating. All three also require you to track down the IIGS ROMs and are on a whole not user friendly but more powerful with some feature sets than MAME IIGS emulator (also typically faster emulation).įirst thing, set your expectations for MAME for the IIGS because it isn't straightforward: The advantage of the others is you can typically run as a true "computer" a bit easier than in MAME but they come with a big learning curve of understanding the era's disk formats and guts of IIGS. MAME in theory is the easiest to initially get rolling, particularly if you are familiar with the inner workings of MAME for arcade setups. There are other emulators such as GSPlus, KEGS32, and GSPort. I assume you are trying to setup via MAME (formerly MESS for IIGS emulation) since that is what the LB video was presenting.
