Jump to content

Soundtracker Central: Difference between revisions

From soundtracker central
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
{{infobox
{{Infobox cheese
| abovestyle  =
| name          = Parmigiano Reggiano
| above      =
| image        = [[Image:Parmigiano reggiano piece.jpg|260px]]
| image       =
| othernames    =  
| caption    =
| country       = [[Italy]]
| headerstyle =
| region        =  
| header1    =
| town          = [[Parma]], [[Reggio Emilia]], [[Modena]], [[Bologna]], [[Mantua]]
| label1      =
| source        = Cows
| data1       =
| pasteurised  = No
| header2    =
| texture       = Hard
| label2      =
| fat          =  
| data2      =
| protein      =  
...
| dimensions    =  
| header20    =
| weight        =  
| label20    =
| aging        = 24 months or more
| data20      =
| certification = [[Protected designation of origin|PDO]] 1992
}}
}}



Revision as of 18:31, 6 December 2025

Template:Infobox cheese


Welcome to the ultimate hub for retro music enthusiasts! This wikipage is dedicated to the iconic soundtrackers that powered creativity on classic and retro machines. From chip-tune pioneers to demoscene legends, we celebrate the tools that shaped a generation. Explore the trackers that defined sound on systems like the Amiga, C64, Atari ST, MS-DOS and many other machines. Each tool here represents a unique era of digital music craftsmanship. Dive into the world of pattern editors, sample manipulators, and hardware quirks. Experience how limitations sparked unlimited creativity.

Moonove

(last update : December 2025)

Select your platform

AdLib - Amstrad CPC - Apple Iphone/Ipad - Atari ST/Falcon - Atari VCS - Atari XE/XL - BBC Micro - BeOS - BK 0010 - Commodore Amiga - Commodore 64 - Commodore Vic20 - Javascript - Nintendo Gameboy - Linux - MacOs - Microsoft Windows - MS Dos - Msx - Neo Geo Pocket - Nintendo Entertainment System - Nintendo DS - PC 88 - Sam Coupé - Sega Genesis - Super NES - Thomson Mo5 - Texas Instruments - X68000 - Zx Spectrum - Modern Devices