By James Hobson

Ready to feel inadequate with your programming skills? You’ve been warned. Take a look at Voja's single chip video game console using the PIC24. It produces the VGA signal, 5 channel sound, and is presented in a gamepad form-factor with directional pad and two buttons.
He’s been working with PIC24 for a while now generating VGA signals, and he decided it might be fun to create a 2D video game...so he decided to see if he could program a replica of the old Spectrum game Jumping Jack (play it online here).
It uses a PIC24EP512GP202 micro-controller, complete with 512K flash memory, 48k data, and a whopping 28 pins. The game, which is extremely well documented, is laid out over on his projects page. It makes our heads spin just looking at it!
This is a great project to compare with the ArduinoCade from last week. Both do an amazing job of pumping out audio and video while leaving enough room for the game to actually run.
Anyway, enough talking about it — just take a look at the following demo!

Ready to feel inadequate with your programming skills? You’ve been warned. Take a look at Voja's single chip video game console using the PIC24. It produces the VGA signal, 5 channel sound, and is presented in a gamepad form-factor with directional pad and two buttons.
He’s been working with PIC24 for a while now generating VGA signals, and he decided it might be fun to create a 2D video game...so he decided to see if he could program a replica of the old Spectrum game Jumping Jack (play it online here).
It uses a PIC24EP512GP202 micro-controller, complete with 512K flash memory, 48k data, and a whopping 28 pins. The game, which is extremely well documented, is laid out over on his projects page. It makes our heads spin just looking at it!
This is a great project to compare with the ArduinoCade from last week. Both do an amazing job of pumping out audio and video while leaving enough room for the game to actually run.
Anyway, enough talking about it — just take a look at the following demo!
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