📰 News & Updates
New pricing & PD bundle in the shop

Pricing reform: BASIC from €10/month, PRO from €15/month — both membership tiers are cheaper now. New in the shop: the complete PD Collection Bundle for €99 — all Public-Domain collections in one package instead of ~€300 individually. Plans → · View bundle →

Four Worlds, One Mission – new homepage + roadmap

The homepage got a fresh start: 4 LIVE projects (Amigo AI, Amiga World, Amiga DB, Retro Shop), three WIP sections (AmigoOS, our own emulator, Amiga Windows Tool) and a roadmap block featuring C64, PS1 and PS2 — every retro classic gets its own world. Visit the new homepage →

Amiga Knowledge Base launched – 65,174 entries openly browseable

The Amiga Knowledge Base is live! Over 65,174 curated entries on demos, software, hardware, tracker music, cheats and games — free to browse for everyone. BASIC members unlock full search and unlimited access, PRO will soon get the complete archive download. Start browsing →

Registration fixed & newsletter with Captcha

Good news: user registration is back to working smoothly! We’ve also added a Captcha to our newsletter sign-up to keep bot submissions out. Register now →

Community discussion on English Amiga Board

The Amiga community is talking about Amigo AI! There’s already a lively discussion on the English Amiga Board with over 14 replies. Drop by and share your thoughts! To the EAB thread →

🗃️ Amiga Database
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🗃️ Amiga Knowledge Base

65,174 curated entries on demos, software, hardware and history of the Commodore Amiga

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Bitplanes

Bitplanes constitute the planar graphics architecture fundamental to Amiga computers, where image data is organized into separate memory layers with each plane containing one bit of color information per pixel. The Amiga's display hardware combines these planes to produce the final image, supporting 2^n colors from n bitplanes—up to six planes (64 colors) in OCS/ECS chipsets and eight planes (256 colors) in AGA systems. This design enabled efficient hardware scrolling by modifying bitplane pointers rather than moving data, and allowed the Copper co-processor to manipulate color registers mid-frame, though each additional plane consumed more DMA bandwidth from the shared chip memory.
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