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New pricing & PD bundle in the shop

Pricing reform: BASIC from โ‚ฌ10/month, PRO from โ‚ฌ15/month โ€” both membership tiers are cheaper now. New in the shop: the complete PD Collection Bundle for โ‚ฌ99 โ€” all Public-Domain collections in one package instead of ~โ‚ฌ300 individually. Plans → ยท View bundle →

Four Worlds, One Mission โ€“ 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 โ€” every retro classic gets its own world. Visit the new homepage →

Amiga Knowledge Base launched โ€“ 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 โ€” free to browse for everyone. BASIC members unlock full search and unlimited access, PRO will soon get the complete archive download. Start browsing →

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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 →

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Amiga to Modern Monitor

Your A500 outputs 15-kHz RGB, your new 4K monitor wants HDMI or DisplayPort. This is the household retro problem. Here are the five common solutions — from "10 euros and it works" to "500 euros and perfect".

The Problem in Brief

The Amiga outputs an analogue RGB signal with 15 kHz horizontal frequency on its DB23 port (A500/600/1200 OCS/ECS; AGA can also do 31 kHz). Modern monitors require 31 kHz upwards. Between the two lies a scaler/converter. The picture quality depends heavily on how well the scaler works.

RGB2HDMI

Sweet Spot 2026

Raspberry Pi-based digital capture. Open Source. Reads the RGB signal pixel-perfect (no analogue re-sampling), outputs HDMI. Exactly what the Amiga community has established as the standard for 2024+.

  • How it works: Pi Zero 2 / 3A+ + HAT board, reads the Amiga pixels directly from the colour signals (not from RGB voltage)
  • Picture quality: Pixel-perfect, zero lag (under 1 frame)
  • Price: DIY ~35-50 €, ready-made ~70-90 €
  • Buy: IanSB/RGBtoHDMI on GitHub, retrorgb.com, AmiBay
  • Pros: Digital picture, very good quality, inexpensive, Open Source
  • Cons: Needs DB23 connection (external), calibration initially fiddly

OSSC (Open Source Scan Converter)

Line-Doubler

FPGA-based line-doubler (not a scaler!) — multiplies the 15 kHz lines to 31/60/120 kHz, but without interpolation. Result: razor sharp, but not all TVs/monitors accept the signal. Very popular with console enthusiasts.

  • Price: ~130-160 €
  • Buy: videogameperfection.com (Marko Manninen, UK)
  • Pros: Extremely low latency (under 0.2 ms), scanline simulation, Line5x for 4K
  • Cons: Compatibility monitor-dependent, more expensive than RGB2HDMI, no real scaler with broken signals

GBS-Control (GBS-8200 modded)

Budget

The ~20 € cheap Chinese scaler GBS-8200 + ESP8266 with GBS-Control firmware makes for a surprisingly passable RGB-to-VGA converter. No HDMI out directly — you still need a VGA-to-HDMI adapter (5-10 €) behind it.

  • Price: 20-25 € GBS + 5 € ESP + 10 € VGA-HDMI = under 40 € complete
  • Firmware: github.com/ramapcsx2/gbs-control
  • Pros: Absolute price-breaker, web GUI via WiFi
  • Cons: No clean picture quality like RGB2HDMI, flashing requires soldering, hit-or-miss

Indivision AGA MK3 / ECS MK3

Internal

Individual Computers' internal flicker fixer — plugs directly onto the Denise/Lisa chip. Outputs a DVI/HDMI signal internally from the Amiga. No external box, no cable clutter.

  • Price: ~190-240 € (Indivision AGA MK3 for A1200, Indivision ECS MK3 for A500)
  • Buy: icomp.de, vesalia.de, AmigaStore
  • Pros: Internal, very compatible, OSD menu, good picture quality
  • Cons: Installation requires opening case + chip socketing, more expensive than RGB2HDMI

Framemeister XRGB-mini (discontinued)

Used

The legendary Micomsoft Framemeister (Japan) — was the reference for years, no longer manufactured. Used on eBay ~400-600 €. Only worth it for collectors now, RGB2HDMI has functionally surpassed it.

  • Pros: Premium picture quality, many configuration options
  • Cons: Only available used now, expensive, qualitatively surpassed by RGB2HDMI

Comparison Matrix

Solution Price Quality Installation
RGB2HDMI35-90 €Very goodExternal, plug and play
OSSC130-160 €Very good (line-doubler)External, plug and play
GBS-Control~40 €OKExternal, but soldering for ESP
Indivision MK3190-240 €Very goodInternal, chip socket
Framemeister400-600 € (used)PremiumExternal

Recommendations 2026

  • Best all-rounder: RGB2HDMI — perfect picture, fair price, active community.
  • Budget: GBS-Control — under 40 € complete, sufficient for casual retro.
  • Lag-sensitive / CRT feel: OSSC — zero lag, line-doubler with scanlines.
  • Clean inside the case: Indivision MK3 — one cable out, done.
  • Premium collector: Framemeister — if you already have three of them anyway.
💡 Don't forget audio: Most RGB scalers deliver no audio over HDMI. Solution: Tap audio separately from the Amiga RCA output and play back via TV/AVR, or RGB-SCART cable that mixes audio into SCART (doesn't work with many modern HDMI converters).

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