NES 2.0 submappers/Proposals: Difference between revisions

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(Added my proposals.for UxROM)
(Undo revision 12784 by Hamtaro126 (talk) — these are entirely redundant to existing definitions)
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Test ROM:
Test ROM:
* '''please create a test ROM before allocating this submapper'''
* '''please create a test ROM before allocating this submapper'''
== 002: 3, 4 [[UxROM]] ==
Status: Wishlist
A homebrew/hacked version of UxROM, no bus conflicts and with PRG-RAM installed at $6000-$7FFF.
Submappers: <br>
3: Compatibility with Plain UxROM, bankswitch via $8000-$BFFF <br>
4: Compatibility with Crazy Climber UxROM, bankswitch via $C000-$FFFF <br>
Test ROMs:
* '''please create a test ROM before allocating these submappers'''


== 005: [[MMC5]] ==
== 005: [[MMC5]] ==

Revision as of 19:43, 11 August 2016

This page collects proposals for NES 2.0 submappers that are not yet ready for implementation.

  1. Explain what game or ROM is incompatible with existing submappers.
  2. Explain how the proposed submapper should be implemented.
  3. Allow one or more other members of the community to independently verify that both 1 and 2 are correct. (We'll perform peer review, commentary, and possible revision/iteration here.)
  4. Allocate and document the new submapper, listing the relevant game/ROM.

When allocating new submappers, please consult kevtris' original proposal before choosing a number. If it is something he already assigned that we have just not adopted yet, use his existing assignment: submappers.txt

If there is no existing game or ROM that requires a submapper, it should not yet be allocated. There is no end to possible variations of hardware, and there is no need to speculate on the future. If you want to work on a project that will require a new mapper, engage the community and/or seek help from others. Do not pre-emptively add a new mapper to the spec until there is something we can run with it. The spec will still be here when you're finished your project.


021, 023, 025: VRC2 / VRC4

these submappers are fully specified, allocation is pending the existence of test ROMs

additional review and consensus for the allocation numbering scheme is requested

These three mappers collect various configurations of VRC2 and VRC4 boards.

VRC2 is mostly a subset of VRC4, with differences including:

  • VRC2 has a single bit of memory mapped at $6000-6FFF that the VRC4 does not[1], though it is redundant if WRAM is used.
  • VRC4 has an interrupt device that VRC2 does not.

Additionally, different boards connect the address lines for the registers in various arrangements. The three iNES mappers 21, 23, and 25 each combine multiple boards whose addresses overlap. This is enough for game compatibility, but it creates an ugly combination that does not accurately describe the original hardware of either board.

Submapper assignment

Konami's VRC4 mapper has five known variations (and one additional pirate variation) of how the board connects low CPU address lines among A7-A0 to the port select lines of the mapper. These are spread across three mappers: two for 21, two for 25, and one for 23. There are theoretically 8 * 7 = 56 ways to wire these, but in all five extant possibilities, two adjacent address lines are used: A2 and A1, A0 and A1, A7 and A6, A2 and A3, and A3 and A2. All 14 ways to pick two subsequent integers easily fit in a submapper number:

3210
||||
|+++- Which address line corresponds is wired to the A1 in the VRC4a
+---- 0: Use next lower address line for VRC4a A2; 1: use next higher line

The values 0 (A0 and next lower) and 15 (A7 and next higher) are impossible. 15 is used to indicate VRC2 for the two mappers that it shares with VRC4.

The VRC4 article describes the ports by mapping them to the variant called "VRC4a" on that page, which uses A2 and A1, putting the four VRC IRQ ports (IRQ Latch low, IRQ Latch high, IRQ Control, and IRQ Acknowledge) at $F000, $F002, $F004, and $F006.

Nickname A2 A1 Registers iNES mapper NES 2.0 submapper
VRC4a A2 A1 $x000, $x002, $x004, $x006 21 9
VRC4b A0 A1 $x000, $x002, $x001, $x003 25 1
VRC4c A7 A6 $x000, $x040, $x080, $x0C0 21 14
VRC4d A2 A3 $x000, $x008, $x004, $x00C 25 3
VRC4e A3 A2 $x000, $x004, $x008, $x00C 23 10
VRC4f A1 A0 $x000, $x001, $x002, $x003 23 8

There are three variations of the VRC2 boards:

Nickname A2 A1 Registers iNES mapper NES 2.0 submapper
VRC2a* A1 A0 $x000, $x002, $x001, $x003 22 0
VRC2b A0 A1 $x000, $x001, $x002, $x003 23 15
VRC2c A1 A0 $x000, $x002, $x001, $x003 25 15
* Note that VRC2a is exclusively assigned to mapper 22, because it has an CHR bank select implementation that is incompatible with the others.

Alternative Submapper Assignment

Each of the 3 mappers represents only 2 addressing schemes. Any new addressing schemes are not backward compatible with iNES anyway so don't need their own submapper numbers. A newly discovered board would be a new mapper, not a submapper. There's no need to make space for future boards, the only potential variants for existing boards is VRC2 vs VRC4.

I would instead propose:

  • 021: 1 VRC4a (A2, A1)
  • 021: 2 VRC4c (A7, A6)
  • 021: 3 unseen VRC2 (A2, A1)
  • 021: 4 unseen VRC2 (A7, A6)
  • 023: 1 VRC4f (A1, A0)
  • 023: 2 VRC4e (A3, A2)
  • 023: 3 VRC2b (A1, A0)
  • 023: 4 unseen VRC2 (A3, A2)
  • 025: 1 VRC4b (A0, A1)
  • 025: 2 VRC4d (A2, A3)
  • 025: 3 VRC2c (A0, A1)
  • 025: 4 unseen VRC2 (A2, A3)

This covers all known variants, and any potential undiscovered VRC2 variants that could fit the existing iNES mappers.

021 / 023 / 025: 0

The default implementation acts as a VRC4 (mostly compatible superset of VRC2), and responds to register writes in one or more configurations simultaneously (supporting both boards at once).

021 / 023 / 025: 1, 3, 8, 9, 10, 14 VRC4

These allocations each request a single specific addressing scheme for VRC4, rather than the combined version used by submapper 0.

Test ROMs:

  • 021: 9 VRC4a - please create a test ROM before allocating this submapper
  • 025: 1 VRC4b - please create a test ROM before allocating this submapper
  • 021: 14 VRC4c - please create a test ROM before allocating this submapper
  • 025: 3 VRC4d - please create a test ROM before allocating this submapper
  • 023: 10 VRC4e - please create a test ROM before allocating this submapper
  • 023: 8 VRC4f - please create a test ROM before allocating this submapper

023: 8 VRC4f

Some second-source VRC4 clones used a memory layout that was identical to the VRC2b (the simplest contiguous in-order interpretation: 0,1,2,3). This was used in World Hero.

Test ROM:

  • please create a test ROM before allocating this submapper

023: 15 VRC2b

Some games rely on a single bit of memory mapped in the region from $6000-$6FFF on VRC2. These games were previously supported with submapper 0 by implementing WRAM in this region (despite these games not having WRAM). Additionally, VRC2 does not implement VRC4's interrupts. This board was used in Contra (J) and Ganbare Goemon 2.

Test ROM:

  • please create a test ROM before allocating this submapper

025: 15 VRC2c

Ganbare Goemon Gaiden: Keita Ougon Kiseru uses VRC2c. It is compatible with submapper 0, but VRC4 has an additional interrupt capability (unused by this game).

Test ROM:

  • please create a test ROM before allocating this submapper

005: MMC5

Status: Wishlist

Vertical split mode:
0: SL (all known hardware)
1: CL

If only one kind (battery or non-battery) of PRG-RAM present:
0: PRG-RAM is contiguous (EKROM, EWROM)
2: PRG-RAM is not contiguous; is split in half across two chips

If both kinds of PRG-RAM present:
0: Chip 0 is battery-backed (ETROM (note: verify this))
2: Chip 1 is battery-backed

Pulse waves volume:
0: R1 is 6.8kΩ (as in all games that use expansion audio)
4: R1 is 15kΩ (the nominal value of this resistor)

It is safe to leave the submapper number at 0 for all known games.

019: Namco 129 and 163

Status: Problem outline

Mapper 19 designates the Namco 129 and 163, which supports expansion sound, IRQs, and ROM nametables.

Different 163-using PCBs used a different resistor to change the volume of the expansion audio relative to the internal 2A03 audio. It is unclear if this variation warrants a submapper.

KH allocated a submapper specifically for the N163-using game Mindseeker. It is not known what is different about this game.

Tentative suggestion:
Mapper 19:
1: N163, expansion audio unused (mixing resistor: 0Ω)
2: N163, mixing resistor: 4.7kΩ
3: N163, mixing resistor: 10kΩ
4: N163, mixing resistor: 15kΩ
9: N129. Expansion audio is known buggy relative to N163, but other differences are not known.

Source: KH's submappers

083: Cony

There's actually three different versions of the hardware, all assigned to the same mapper.

Unfortunately, we have no idea which is which.

Here's Kevtris's assignments:

083: 0

"Bog-standard Cony mapper. 1K CHR ROM banks, no WRAM."

083: 1

"Same, but with 2K CHR ROM banks instead."

083: 2

"This is the standard Cony mapper with the following changes:

  1. 1K CHR ROM banks (like 83.0)
  1. a 4 bit 256K CHR/PRG bank select register:
    • B000h: bits 6 and 7 select the 256K superbank
  1. 1 byte of RAM at 5103h (stores the last game played) Game will not start without this RAM byte.
  1. WRAM at 6000-7FFFh. WRAM is banked with the PRG/CHR superbank. This gives a total of 32K. It is battery backed.

iNES Mapper 185

Status: Draft

A few NROM-like games were released on CNROM boards where all four bits of the latch were solely used as an anti-piracy measure. While a documented heuristic exists for which values were used, we tentatively suggest that the submapper here indicate the value to be written to the latch for normal operation (submapper = (latch&0x30)/4+(latch&3))

3210  
||||
|||+- Bit 0 (bank number)
||+-- Bit 1 (bank number)
|+--- Bit 4 (diode config)
+---- Bit 5 (diode config)

In the case that any of the bits are "don't care", use 0.


On second thought, lidnariq would be happier with

3210
xxCC
||||
|||+- Bit 0 (bank number)
||+-- Bit 1 (bank number)
++--- Always "01", so that submapper 0 (use heuristic) doesn't collide with "write 0 for correct operation"

References

  1. http://forums.nesdev.org/viewtopic.php?t=8274 VRC2 memory bit at $6000-$6FFF