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Sound chip

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A sound chip is an integrated circuit (i.e. "chip") designed to produce sound. It might be doing this through digital, analog or mixed-mode electronics. Sound chips normally contain things like oscillators, envelope controllers, samplers, filters and amplifiers. During the late 20th century, sound chips were widely used in arcade game system boards, video game consoles, home computers, and PC sound cards.

Programmable sound generators (PSG)

Atari

General Instrument

Konami

Philips

Ricoh

Sega

Sunsoft

Texas Instruments

Yamahaedit

Wavetable-lookup synthesis

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Table-lookup_synthesis

Note: Wavetable-lookup synthesis chips are sometimes incorrectly referred as wavetable synthesis.

Atari

Hudson Soft

Konami

  • Konami SCC, used in certain arcade boards and game carts for the MSX.

Namco

Frequency modulation synthesis (FM synth)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frequency_modulation_synthesis

Atari

  • Jerry, used in the Atari Jaguar. Also supports single-cycle wavetable-lookup synthesis and PCM (sample-based synthesis).

ESS Tech

  • ESFM synthesizer, used in most ESS Tech sound chips, ES1868/69 being most common. Chip includes wavetable interface. Two modes, one "OPL2/3 compatible" and the other the native superset.

Konami

Yamaha

Pulse-code modulation

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pulse-code_modulation

Atari

  • Jerry, used in the Atari Jaguar. Also supports FM and single-cycle wavetable-lookup synthesis.
  • SDMA, used in Atari Falcon030.

Drucegrove

Harris

MOS Technology

Namco

National SemiConductor

  • LMC1992, used in Atari STE and Atari TT030

Oki

Ricoh

Sanyo

  • VLM5030 Speech Synthesizer, a speech synthesis chip used in the arcade game Punch-Out!!

Sega

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