Color $0D games

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Revision as of 00:38, 25 January 2023 by Fiskbit (talk | contribs) (Adds Castelian to the list.)
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On an NES, the palette color $0D causes the signal to drop below the normal black level. This low voltage signal is sometimes mistaken by televisions for blanking signals, which can cause an unstable picture, or total picture loss on some devices. Other devices seem to process with signal without problem.

Games

Game Notes
Contra 100 in 1 Uses both for background color and one of the sprites' color; to apply a patch, change values at those offsets in ROM from $0D to $0F:

$388B, $388F, $3893, $3897, $389B, $389C, $389F, $38A3, $38A7

Contra 168 in 1 Uses both for background color and one of the sprites' color; to apply a patch, change values at those offsets in ROM from $0D to $0F:

$2451, $2455, $2459, $245D, $2461, $2462, 2465, $2469, $246D

Bee 52
Castelian
Cybernoid $0D is used as the background color.
The Fantastic Adventures of Dizzy
Game Genie The code entry screen uses it for its background.
The Immortal Also uses all three de-emphasis bits to compensate for the the user cranking up the TV set's brightness so that regular black ($xE/$xF) can be used as a darker shade of gray while color $0D is used as a black background color.
Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (Taito) Used as the background color in the motorcycle level.
Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (Ubisoft)
Maniac Mansion (US)
Micro Machines
MIG-29 Soviet Fighter
Quattro Sports
Quattro Adventures
Skate or Die 2 Used as the background color during the introduction cutscene sequence.
The Super Shinobi Unlicensed clone of Shinobi III.
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Uses it for black outlines on sprites, the lack of large areas of this color mitigates the problem.
The Three Stooges Uses $xD colors that get turned to $0D during fades

Effects

Because the signal created by $0D is outside the specifications for the video signal, there is a lot of variation in how display devices handle it. Here are some possible effects that may be seen when using $0D:

  • $0D appears the same black as the other black colors (e.g. $0F).
  • $0D appears slightly darker than other blacks.
  • The device renormalizes the range when $0D appears, slightly brightening all other colours while it is onscreen.
  • Wobbly or distorted image from loss of horizontal blanking stability.
  • Total loss of picture.

Tests

  • Palette test ROM - Displays NES palette, and can toggle $0D display.
  • NESPix - Native graphics editor that allows use of $0D, and can test it in various visual arrangements.
  • 240p test suite - TV testing program. Test cards with $0D include PLUGE, SMPTE color bars, Solid color screen, and IRE. PLUGE also includes emphasized $0D.

See also