Namco 163: Difference between revisions

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== Banks ==
== Banks ==
* CPU $6000-$7FFF: 8 KB PRG RAM bank
* CPU $6000-$7FFF: 8 KB PRG RAM bank (Namco 129/163, 175 only)
* CPU $8000-$9FFF: 8 KB switchable PRG ROM bank
* CPU $8000-$9FFF: 8 KB switchable PRG ROM bank
* CPU $A000-$BFFF: 8 KB switchable PRG ROM bank
* CPU $A000-$BFFF: 8 KB switchable PRG ROM bank

Revision as of 21:52, 23 June 2015


Namco 129/163
Company Namco
Games 20 in NesCartDB
Complexity ASIC
Boards 11xF0, 111F0S
PRG ROM capacity 512K
PRG ROM window 8Kx3 + 8K fixed
PRG RAM capacity 8K
PRG RAM window 8K
CHR capacity 256K
CHR window 1Kx8 (PT) + 1Kx4 (NT)
Nametable mirroring H, V, D, L, 1, others
Bus conflicts No
IRQ CPU cycle counter
Audio Yes
iNES mappers 019


Namco 175
Company Namco
Games 4 in NesCartDB
Complexity ASIC
Boards 110F0B
PRG ROM capacity 512K
PRG ROM window 8Kx3 + 8K fixed
PRG RAM capacity 8K
PRG RAM window 8K
CHR capacity 256K
CHR window 1Kx8
Nametable mirroring H or V fixed
Bus conflicts No
IRQ No
Audio No
iNES mappers 210


Namco 340
Company Namco
Games 8 in NesCartDB
Complexity ASIC
Boards CS000x
PRG ROM capacity 512K
PRG ROM window 8Kx3 + 8K fixed
PRG RAM capacity none
PRG RAM window none
CHR capacity 256K
CHR window 1Kx8
Nametable mirroring H, V, or 1 switchable
Bus conflicts No
IRQ No
Audio No
iNES mappers 210

The Namco 129 and 163 with expansion sound are assigned to iNES Mapper 19, while simpler variants using the Namco 175 ICs have hard-wired mirroring, while 340 are mapper-switchable and both are assigned to iNES Mapper 210. All four were packaged in 48-pin TQFPs.

Many older programs incorrectly identify this mapper by the name Namco 106. Some sources use the name Namcot instead of Namco, as some games and PCBs use this variation on the company name.

In addition to the 8 KB of PRG RAM that may be available, the Namco 163 has an additional 128 bytes of internal memory intended for the audio expansion. If the audio expansion is disabled, this can be used as extra RAM accessible through the audio data ports.

Example games: (Mapper 019)

  • Digital Devil Story - Megami Tensei II
  • Erika to Satoru no Yume Bouken
  • Famista '90
  • Final Lap
  • King of Kings (Namco)
  • Rolling Thunder (J)
  • Sangokushi I, II (Namco)
  • Star Wars (Namco)
  • Mappy Kids
  • Namco Classic I, II

Example games: (Mapper 210)

  • Dream Master
  • Famista '91 - '94
  • Splatter House
  • Wagyan Land 2, 3

Banks

  • CPU $6000-$7FFF: 8 KB PRG RAM bank (Namco 129/163, 175 only)
  • CPU $8000-$9FFF: 8 KB switchable PRG ROM bank
  • CPU $A000-$BFFF: 8 KB switchable PRG ROM bank
  • CPU $C000-$DFFF: 8 KB switchable PRG ROM bank
  • CPU $E000-$FFFF: 8 KB PRG ROM bank, fixed to the last bank
  • PPU $0000-$03FF: 1 KB switchable CHR bank
  • PPU $0400-$07FF: 1 KB switchable CHR bank
  • PPU $0800-$0BFF: 1 KB switchable CHR bank
  • PPU $0C00-$0FFF: 1 KB switchable CHR bank
  • PPU $1000-$13FF: 1 KB switchable CHR bank
  • PPU $1400-$17FF: 1 KB switchable CHR bank
  • PPU $1800-$1BFF: 1 KB switchable CHR bank
  • PPU $1C00-$1FFF: 1 KB switchable CHR bank
  • PPU $2000-$23FF: 1 KB switchable CHR bank (Mapper 019 only)
  • PPU $2400-$27FF: 1 KB switchable CHR bank (Mapper 019 only)
  • PPU $2800-$2BFF: 1 KB switchable CHR bank (Mapper 019 only)
  • PPU $2C00-$2FFF: 1 KB switchable CHR bank (Mapper 019 only)

Mapper 19 has the unusual ability to select the internal 2 KB nametable RAM as a CHR bank page, allowing it to be used as CHR RAM in combination with the existing CHR ROM.

Registers

The 163 has 19 registers within $4800-$5FFF and $8000-$FFFF, while the the 175 and 340 only have 12. Each register occupies a range of $800 bytes, so $4800-$4FFF all refers to one register, $5000-$57FF all refers to another register, and so on.

Sound Data Port ($4800-$4FFF) r/w (Namco 129,163 only)

See Namco 163 audio.

IRQ Counter (low) ($5000-$57FF) r/w (Namco 129,163 only)

7  bit  0
---- ----
IIII IIII
|||| ||||
++++-++++- Low 8 bits of IRQ counter

IRQ Counter (high) / IRQ Enable ($5800-$5FFF) r/w (Namco 129,163 only)

7  bit  0
---- ----
EIII IIII
|||| ||||
|+++-++++- High 7 bits of IRQ counter
+--------- IRQ Enable: (0: disabled; 1: enabled)

CHR and NT Select ($8000-$DFFF) w

Value CPU writes Behavior
$00-$DF Always selects 1KB page of CHR-ROM
$E0-$FF If enabled by bit in $E800 and using a N163 or N129, use the NES's internal nametables (even values for A, odd values for B)
Write to CPU address 1KB CHR bank affected Values ≥ $E0 denote NES NTRAM if
$8000-$87FF $0000-$03FF $E800.6 = 0
$8800-$8FFF $0400-$07FF $E800.6 = 0
$9000-$97FF $0800-$0BFF $E800.6 = 0
$9800-$9FFF $0C00-$0FFF $E800.6 = 0
$A000-$A7FF $1000-$13FF $E800.7 = 0
$A800-$AFFF $1400-$17FF $E800.7 = 0
$B000-$B7FF $1800-$1BFF $E800.7 = 0
$B800-$BFFF $1C00-$1FFF $E800.7 = 0
$C000-$C7FF $2000-$23FF always
$C800-$CFFF $2400-$27FF always
$D000-$D7FF $2800-$2BFF always
$D800-$DFFF $2C00-$2FFF always

Note: With mapper 210, a.k.a. Namco 175 or 340, the nametable selection registers have no effect, and nametable RAM cannot be used as CHR-RAM.

It is believed, but untested, that a game could add a normal SRAM and use it instead of the nametable RAM; if so, a game would be able to get 4-screen mirroring and many more pages of CHR-RAM.

Mirroring examples: (Mapper 19 only)

Mode $C000 $C800 $D000 $D800
Horizontal $E0 $E0 $E1 $E1
Vertical $E0 $E1 $E0 $E1
1-Screen 0 $E0 $E0 $E0 $E0
1-Screen 1 $E1 $E1 $E1 $E1
Diagonal $E0 $E1 $E1 $E0
L-Shaped $E0 $E1 $E1 $E1

External PRG RAM enable ($C000-$C7FF) w (Namco 175 only)

7  bit  0
---- ----
.... ...E
        |
        +- 1: Enable PRG RAM

PRG Select 1 ($E000-$E7FF) w

7  bit  0
---- ----
MMPP PPPP
|||| ||||
||++-++++- Select 8KB page of PRG-ROM at $8000
|+-------- Namco 129, 163 only: Disable sound if set
++-------- Namco 340 only: Select mirroring
             0: One-screen A
             1: Vertical
             2: Horizontal
             3: One-screen B

PRG Select 2 / CHR-RAM Enable ($E800-$EFFF) w

7  bit  0
---- ----
HLPP PPPP
|||| ||||
||++-++++- Select 8KB page of PRG-ROM at $A000
|+-------- Disable CHR-RAM at $0000-$0FFF (Namco 129, 163 only)
|            0: Pages $E0-$FF use NT RAM as CHR-RAM
|            1: Pages $E0-$FF are the last $20 banks of CHR-ROM
+--------- Disable CHR-RAM at $1000-$1FFF (Namco 129, 163 only)
             0: Pages $E0-$FF use NT RAM as CHR-RAM
             1: Pages $E0-$FF are the last $20 banks of CHR-ROM

PRG Select 3 ($F000-$F7FF) w

7  bit  0
---- ----
..PP PPPP
  || ||||
  ++-++++- Select 8KB page of PRG-ROM at $C000

Write Protect for External RAM AND Sound Address Port ($F800-$FFFF) w (Namco 129, 163 only)

7  bit  0
---- ----
KKKK DCBA
|||| ||||
|||| |||+- 1: Write-protect 2kB window of external RAM from $6000-$67FF (0: write enable)
|||| ||+-- 1: Write-protect 2kB window of external RAM from $6800-$6FFF (0: write enable)
|||| |+--- 1: Write-protect 2kB window of external RAM from $7000-$77FF (0: write enable)
|||| +---- 1: Write-protect 2kB window of external RAM from $7800-$7FFF (0: write enable)
++++------ Additionally the upper nybble must be equal to b0100 to enable writes

Any value outside of the range $40-$4E will cause all PRG RAM to be read-only.

Also see Namco 163 audio.

IRQ Operation

The IRQ is a 15-bit CPU cycle up-counter. $5000 and $5800 provide direct access to the counter itself (i.e., this isn't a reload value). Games can read and write to these registers in realtime.

The IRQ counter increments on each CPU cycle. Upon reaching $7FFF, an IRQ is fired, and it stops counting. Writing to $5000 or $5800 will acknowledge any pending IRQs.

See also

All of the below are in Japanese: