My DIY FPGA board can run Quake II

(blog.mikhe.ch)

50 points | by sznio 3 days ago

9 comments

  • bee_rider 4 minutes ago
    Quake 2 was the one with the clever approximate inverse square root code, right? I wonder (especially since there’s an instruction nowadays to draw inspiration from), can you implement it “in hardware,” so to speak?
  • klodolph 14 minutes ago
    The diagonal traces and the empty spaces are throwing me for a loop. Is this the autorouter in action? (But… still, nice work.)
  • xracy 1 hour ago
    This is really cool and impressive... but relatedly...

    Has anyone figured out what the minimum specs for Quake are?

    I feel like the first thing everyone does with a computer is to determine whether or not it can run quake, and I'm just wondering what the like, most simple computer that could exist is, that could run quake?

    • klodolph 9 minutes ago
      You can find a lot of discussion about what the minimum specs for Quake are. Famously, it needs a decent FPU, and the Pentium was a convenient early CPU with a decent built-in FPU. It was significantly faster than a 486.

      …But people have managed to run Quake on the 486.

      And the myth people tell about Quake is that it killed Cyrix, because Quake performance on Cyrix was subpar. But was that true? And if it was true, was that because the Cyrix was slower than a Pentium, or was it because the Quake code had assembly that was hand-optimized for the Pentium FPU pipeline?

      Anyway. “Most simple computer that could run Quake” is probably going to include a decent FPU. If you are implementing something on an FPGA, you can probably get somewhere around 200 MHz clock anyway. At which point you can run Quake II.

    • conception 51 minutes ago
      That’s only because everything can run Doom now.
  • unethicalinfo 2 hours ago
    Cool write up, getting initial bill shock from 2 layer to the 4+ layer PCBs is a rite of passage :)
  • UncleOxidant 1 hour ago
    Cool! Have you considered offering this board on Crowd Supply or similar? There don't seem to be many boards available for Efinix FPGAs.
  • markus_zhang 2 hours ago
    This is very impressive. How did you learn to design a real computer, not the toy ones a lot of people made? I read part 1 and part 2 and looks like you just “thrown in” Ethernet and other stuffs and it was done. Really hope to learn from the process, thanks!
  • sznio 3 days ago
  • argulane 2 days ago
    That's some mad dedication to go from kicad schematics to running Quake. Very impressive!
  • nacozarina 1 hour ago
    Quake II had the best fn soundtrack.