Ace of Aces for MSX

MSX

Simulation flight war
number of games played: 101x last time: Feb 24, 2024, 02:46

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Click on play MSX game now button first to load the game, you can change the settings by clicking on the Settings icon / Help & Settings menu. Control keys:

KEYBOARD = Computer Keyboard

Ace of Aces

Online version of Ace of Aces for MSX. Ace of Aces is a computer game flight simulator developed by Artech Digital Entertainment in 1986. The game takes place during World War II and the player flies a RAF Mosquito long range fighter-bomber equipped with rockets, bombs and a cannon. Missions include destroying German fighter planes, bombers, V-1 flying bombs, U-boats, and trains...

Game details

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Released in
1986
Publisher
Accolade, Inc.
Developer
Artech Digital Productions
Platforms
Commodore 64, Amstrad CPC, MSX (1986), PC Booter, DOS, Atari 8-bit, ZX Spectum (1987), Atari 7800 (1988), Sega Master System (1991)
Ace of Aces downloads & info

Other platforms online 3

You can play Ace of Aces online also in a versions for

66%

rating (30 users voted)

Covers - Box Art

cover Front
cover Back
cover Cartridge, ROM Module

MSX 1/2 Home Computers

Online emulated version of Ace of Aces was originally developed for the MSX a standardized home computer architecture, announced by Microsoft and ASCII Corporation in 1983. It was initially conceived by Microsoft as a product for the Eastern sector, and jointly marketed by Kazuhiko Nishi, then vice-president at Microsoft and director at ASCII Corporation. Microsoft and Nishi conceived the project as an attempt to create unified standards among various home computing system manufacturers of the period, in the same fashion as the VHS standard for home video tape machines.
MSX systems were popular in Japan and several other countries. Sony was the primary manufacturer of MSX systems at the time of release, and throughout most of the products lifespan, producing more units than any other manufacturer. Eventually 5 million MSX-based units were sold in Japan alone.

Nishi's standard was built around the Spectravideo SV-328 computer. The standard consisted primarily of several off-the-shelf parts; the main CPU was a 3.58 MHz Zilog Z80, the Texas Instruments TMS9918 graphics chip with 16 KB of dedicated VRAM, the sound and partial I/O support was provided by the AY-3-8910 chip manufactured by General Instrument, and an Intel 8255 Programmable Peripheral Interface chip was used for the parallel I/O such as the keyboard.

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online game added: 2020-10-13, by dj