community, pioneering the very idea of a corporate personality who actually talks to people rather than at them. Now, he’s taking that veteran expertise to
Pushing Silhouettes: Sweet Fighting Plus Two on the Spectrum
When we talk about hardware limits, we usually discuss 4K textures or ray tracing. But the real magic happens when you try to cram a game designed for high-end arcade boards into 128K of memory.
, the game features a staggering roster of 12 legendary fighters. To keep the gameplay fluid and the frame rate playable, the developers made a bold stylistic choice: they kept the health bars and UI in the
's limited color palette but rendered the actual fighters and backgrounds in high-contrast black and white. This eliminates the "color clash" that usually plagues the system and allows for incredibly detailed sprites that actually look like their arcade counterparts. Playing this on original hardware—or via an interface like the
is legendary because it didn't just try to mimic the arcade; it used the original 68,000 assembly code to ensure the physics and timing were pixel-perfect. But the real standout of that project was the music.
fans, this is more than just a record; it's a trophy representing the community's ability to take 30-year-old hardware and outshine the official ports of the 1980s. Whether you're blasting "Magical Sound Shower" in a
, the game is a genre-defying masterpiece that involves an anthropomorphic bear, international sports, and intergalactic war. For years, however, talking about or sharing footage of this game was impossible because of a persistent copyright troll named
(the trade association) suspending takedowns for the title. It’s a critical case study in how "orphan works" are vulnerable to exploitation and why organizations that fight for the public domain are so vital to our digital heritage. Now, researchers and fans can finally document and translate this bizarre, wonderful piece of history without fear of legal retribution.
The Intelligence Divide: AI and the Lutris Controversy
No technical discussion in 2026 is complete without the elephant in the room:
companies are sucking up hardware resources and infringing on copyrights, making their use unethical in the open-source world. The developer has since removed the "co-authored by Claude" tags to avoid further drama, but the controversy highlights a growing rift in the DIY tech community: do we embrace these tools to save projects from burnout, or do we reject them to protect human craftsmanship and hardware availability?
Demons in the Dashboard: Doom on Home Assistant
Finally, we have to talk about the man who brought
took the ultimate "can it run it?" challenge and integrated the 1993 classic directly into his smart home dashboard. This isn't just a simple web wrapper; it’s a deep integration that treats
binary sensor flips to "on." It tracks player stats, session duration, and even displays a daily "Doom Fact" on your wall tablet. It’s completely unnecessary, technically brilliant, and perfectly captures the DIY spirit of pushing software into places it was never meant to go. Whether you're playing on a