Manufacturer : Commodore | System : AmigaWelcome to the Commodore Amiga ROMs section of the ROM Database. Please scroll down for more sections and remember to share this page. You can also vote for your favourite system. | ||
Commodore Amiga Section. This is one of the largest and most complete rom sets available. A500,A600,A1000,A1200,A2000,A3000,A4000 are all here. The Amiga is a family of personal computers sold by Commodore in the 1980s and 1990s. The first model, the A1000, was launched in 1985 and became popular for its graphical, audio and multi-tasking abilities. The Amiga provided a significant upgrade from 8-bit computers, such as the Commodore 64, and the platform quickly grew in popularity among computer enthusiasts. The name 'Amiga' was chosen because it is the Spanish word for (female) friend, and alphabetically it appears before Apple in lists of computer makers. It originated as a project code-named 'Lorraine', therefore the female was used instead of the male and general version Amigo. The best selling model, the Amiga 500, was introduced in 1987 and became one of the leading home computers of the late 1980s and early 1990s with approximately six million sold. The A3000, introduced in 1990, started the second generation of Amiga Systems, followed by the A500+ and the A600. Finally, as the third generation, the A1200 and the A4000 were released in 1992. However, poor marketing and failure to repeat the technological advances of the first systems meant that the Amiga quickly lost its market share to competing platforms, such as the fourth generation game consoles, Apple Macintosh, and IBM PC compatibles. Based on the Motorola 68000 family of microprocessors, the machine has a custom chipset with graphics and sound capabilities that were unprecedented for the price, and a pre-emptive multitasking operating system called AmigaOS. The original operating system, partly based on TRIPOS and written in BCPL, is called AmigaDOS and the GUI is called Workbench. When it was eventually renamed AmigaOS, the BCPL parts were rewritten in the C language. Although early Commodore advertisements attempt to cast the computer as an all-purpose business machine, especially when outfitted with the Amiga Sidecar PC compatibility addon, the Amiga was most commercially successful as a home computer, with a wide range of games and creative software. It was also a less expensive alternative to the Apple Macintosh and IBM PC as a general-purpose business or home computer. Initially, the Amiga was developed alongside various PC Compatible Systems by Commodore but later Commodore left the PC market. The platform became particularly popular for gaming and programming demos. It also found a prominent role in the desktop video, video production, and show control business, leading to affordable video editing systems such as the Video Toaster. The Amiga's native ability to simultaneously play back multiple digital sound samples made it a popular platform for early 'tracker' music software. The relatively powerful processor and ability to access several megabytes of memory led to the development of several 3D rendering packages, including LightWave 3D and Aladdin 4D. Since the demise of Commodore, various groups have marketed successors to the original Amiga line, including Genesi, Eyetech, ACube Systems and A-EON Technology. Likewise, AmigaOS has influenced replacements, clones and compatible systems such as MorphOS, AmigaOS 4 and AROS. The demise of Commodore has been commonly attributed to numerous factors such as poor marketing, a lack of sufficient third party developers, and a failure to compete with cheaper PC clones with 'multimedia' features and low-cost color-capable Macintosh models such as the Macintosh LC.
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HelpKickstart ROMs GuideKickstart ROM 3.1
Kickstart ROM v3.1
Kickstart 3.1 was was a minor update from 3.0 and mainly included bug fixes. KS3.1 has support for CD32's chunky-to-planar chip, Akiko.
Revision 40.60 (Commodore, 1993) is used by:
- CD32 (along with the CD32 extended ROM)
Revision 40.68 (Commodore, 1993) is used by:
- A1200
- A4000
Revision 40.70 (Commodore, 1994) is used by:
- A4000T
Difference in v40.70: The Kickstart for the A4000T does not contain the workbench.library. It was removed from the ROM to the Workbench disk (in the LIBS: directory), to make room for the A4091 SCSI support.
Legal ways to get Kickstart ROM files
- Buy Cloanto's Amiga Forever package which comes with licensed ROMs
- Extract the Kickstart ROM from your real Amiga using a tool like TransROM, GrabKick or any other Kickstart ROM grabber!
The following Kickstart v3.1 images are available in TOSEC:
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.3 (1993)(Commodore)(beta)[for use with ReKick]
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.55 (1993)(Commodore)(A3000)
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.55 (1993)(Commodore)(A3000)[h ShapeShifter]
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.55 (1993)(Commodore)(A3000)[h ShapeShifter][with bonus]
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.55 (1993)(Commodore)(A4000)
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.60 (1993)(Commodore)(CD32)
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.62 (1993)(Commodore)(A3000)
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.62 (1993)(Commodore)(beta)[for use with ReKick]
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.63 (1993)(Commodore)(A500-A600-A2000)[!]
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.63 (1993)(Commodore)(A500-A600-A2000)[b2]
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.63 (1993)(Commodore)(A500-A600-A2000)[b]
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.63 (1993)(Commodore)(A500-A600-A2000)[h ShapeShifter]
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.68 (1993)(Commodore)(A1200)[!]
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.68 (1993)(Commodore)(A1200)[h ShapeShifter]
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.68 (1993)(Commodore)(A4000)
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.68 (1993)(Commodore)(A4000)[encrypted, needs rom.key]
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.68 (1993)(Commodore)(A4000)[h Cloanto]
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.68 (1993)(Commodore)(A4000)[h ShapeShifter]
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.68 (1993)(Commodore)(beta)[a][for use with ReKick]
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.68 (1993)(Commodore)(beta)[for use with ReKick]
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.69 (1993)(Commodore)(A1200)[h Harry Sintonen]
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.70 (1994)(Commodore)(A3000)[h ShapeShifter]
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.70 (1994)(Commodore)(A4000)
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.70 (1994)(Commodore)(A4000)[b]
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.70 (1994)(Commodore)(A4000)[h ShapeShifter]
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.70 (1994)(Commodore)(A4000T)
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.70 (1994)(Commodore)(beta)[for use with ReKick]
Amiga ROM copyright
To legally use the Amiga v3.1 ROM image with emulators, you must own the specific Amiga model. Lemon Amiga only provides information about different Amiga kickstart versions, but we do not not offer them for download. Neither do we allow requests of kickstart downloads in our forum!
Kickstart ROM v3.1
Kickstart 3.1 was was a minor update from 3.0 and mainly included bug fixes. KS3.1 has support for CD32's chunky-to-planar chip, Akiko.
Revision 40.60 (Commodore, 1993) is used by:
- CD32 (along with the CD32 extended ROM)
Revision 40.68 (Commodore, 1993) is used by:
- A1200
- A4000
Revision 40.70 (Commodore, 1994) is used by:
- A4000T
Difference in v40.70: The Kickstart for the A4000T does not contain the workbench.library. It was removed from the ROM to the Workbench disk (in the LIBS: directory), to make room for the A4091 SCSI support.
Legal ways to get Kickstart ROM files
- Buy Cloanto's Amiga Forever package which comes with licensed ROMs
- Extract the Kickstart ROM from your real Amiga using a tool like TransROM, GrabKick or any other Kickstart ROM grabber!
The following Kickstart v3.1 images are available in TOSEC:
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.3 (1993)(Commodore)(beta)[for use with ReKick]
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.55 (1993)(Commodore)(A3000)
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.55 (1993)(Commodore)(A3000)[h ShapeShifter]
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.55 (1993)(Commodore)(A3000)[h ShapeShifter][with bonus]
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.55 (1993)(Commodore)(A4000)
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.60 (1993)(Commodore)(CD32)
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.62 (1993)(Commodore)(A3000)
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.62 (1993)(Commodore)(beta)[for use with ReKick]
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.63 (1993)(Commodore)(A500-A600-A2000)[!]
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.63 (1993)(Commodore)(A500-A600-A2000)[b2]
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.63 (1993)(Commodore)(A500-A600-A2000)[b]
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.63 (1993)(Commodore)(A500-A600-A2000)[h ShapeShifter]
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.68 (1993)(Commodore)(A1200)[!]
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.68 (1993)(Commodore)(A1200)[h ShapeShifter]
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.68 (1993)(Commodore)(A4000)
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.68 (1993)(Commodore)(A4000)[encrypted, needs rom.key]
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.68 (1993)(Commodore)(A4000)[h Cloanto]
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.68 (1993)(Commodore)(A4000)[h ShapeShifter]
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.68 (1993)(Commodore)(beta)[a][for use with ReKick]
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.68 (1993)(Commodore)(beta)[for use with ReKick]
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.69 (1993)(Commodore)(A1200)[h Harry Sintonen]
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.70 (1994)(Commodore)(A3000)[h ShapeShifter]
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.70 (1994)(Commodore)(A4000)
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.70 (1994)(Commodore)(A4000)[b]
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.70 (1994)(Commodore)(A4000)[h ShapeShifter]
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.70 (1994)(Commodore)(A4000T)
- Kickstart v3.1 rev 40.70 (1994)(Commodore)(beta)[for use with ReKick]
Amiga ROM copyright
To legally use the Amiga v3.1 ROM image with emulators, you must own the specific Amiga model. Lemon Amiga only provides information about different Amiga kickstart versions, but we do not not offer them for download. Neither do we allow requests of kickstart downloads in our forum!
Boot ROM File: Insert name of kickstart file here, defaults to kick.rom. If using more than one rom, then enter the name of the correct rom file e.g. ROM files are supplied with packages such as Cloanto's Amiga Forever or can be grabbed from a real Amiga.Winuae 2.32 has a AROS KS ROM built-in to the system. Kickstart Kick 1.3 (da usare per la quasi totalit dei giochi) Kick 3.0 Kick 3.1. ROM Information Name: BIOS Kickstart (USA, Europe) (v1.3 Rev 34.005) (A500. Kickstart v3.5 rev 40.71.