Total Replay Version 5.1 Released

Total Replay Version 5.1 Released

Total Replay version 5.1, the Apple II Emulation frontend created by the Apple II hacker a2_4am and puts 100s of games at your fingertips, has been released. This latest version includes the following additions and changes to the platform:

add Angry Birds

add Applz

Upgrade Aztec to retail version

Fix crash in Serpentine (issue 559, thanks audetto)

Fix reset issues in Battle Cruiser

Fix Mockingboard issues in Berzap, Crime Wave, Mapple

Fix compatibility issues in Deathsword (issue 556, thanks JDW1)

Fix compatibility issues in Flapple Bird

Fix text display issues during boot

Download

You can Download Total Replay version 5.1 (2024-02-16), in the form of an Apple II emulator ready 32 MB disk image from here, and the release notes of what’s new here

About

Total Replay is a ready to use frontend for exploring and playing classic arcade style games on an 8-bit Apple II computer. Some of the more notable features of the frontend include:

UI for searching and browsing all games

Screensaver mode includes hundreds of screenshots and dozens of self-running demos

In-game protections removed (manual lookups, code wheels, &c.)

Integrated game help

Cheat mode available on most games

Super hi-res box art (requires IIgs)

All games run directly from ProDOS (no swapping floppies!)

System requirements

Total Replay runs on any Apple II with 64K RAM and Applesoft in ROM. Some games require 128K. Some games require a joystick. Total Replay will automatically filter out games that do not work on your machine.

Additionally, you will need a mass storage device that can mount a 32 MB ProDOS hard drive image. This is supported by all major emulators; if you are lucky enough to have a real working Apple ][, you can mount it with a CFFA3000Floppy EmuMicroDriveBOOTI, or similar adapter.

Author: Bill Martens
Apple Pugetsound Program Library Exchange (A.P.P.L.E.) president, callapple.org, owner and curator of virtualapple.org and gamezyte.com. Retro enthusiast and programmer since 1976, co-creator of the first implementation of instant messaging and group chat (1982).