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The NEC PC-9801 (which later became the PC-9821) was, loosely speaking, the Japanese equivalent of the IBM Personal Computer, from 1982 until the late 1990s. Like the IBM PC (and Fujitsu's competing FM Towns line), it used Intel 80x86 or equivalent CPUs, and could run versions of MS-DOS and Microsoft Windows, but was otherwise not 100% IBM-compatible. For more details, see the other Wiki's article.

When released in the early 1980s, the PC-98 was considerably advanced for its time, featuring higher resolutions (initially up to 640x400) than Western computers of that era, and while the audio quality of a base unit was a beeper that's identical to the one used on the IBM PC, better audio quality could be added on using Yamaha FM synthesis soundcards, which were almost always sold bundled with the machine. The PC-98 eventually sold over 18 million units in Japan alone by 1999, making it one of the best-selling computer systems of the 20th century, rivaled only by the Commodore 64 (17 million units) and the IBM Personal Computer in sales. There were also PC-98 clones manufactured by Toshiba and Seiko Epsonnote , although NEC did sue them for their effort in cloning the device. The clones are also why NEC started copy-protecting their OEM versions of MS-DOS.

The characteristic dithered look of PC-98 games is due to the system's idiosyncratic display hardware, namely a pretty anemic Video RAM. Due to the need to display Japanese text with its complex characters, the developers were forced to use high-resolution video mode, which didn't have much of a color depth — early models could show only 8 colors in 640×400 high-res modenote , powered by a pair of NEC µPD7220 GDC chips. The same problem plagued early IBM PC's high-resolution EGA and VGA modes, which were initially not so popular with Western-developed games, but while Western text looked at least somewhat readable in low-res modes, Japanese developers were left without such respite.

The PC-98's contribution to Japanese video game history is a checkered one. Most earlier games for the system were essentially PC-88 games running on a faster 16-bit CPU (and identical video hardware). By the time the PC-98 overtook the PC-88 and MSX, the tide of the PC vs. Console battle in Japan was turning heavily in favor of consoles (including NEC's/Hudson Soft's PC Engine). A few important PC-oriented companies, including Compile, Falcom and Koei, maintained support of the PC-98, though even they started developing many of their important titles for consoles. What ended up thriving on the PC-98 was not so much action games (though indie developers made some remarkable efforts) as RPGs (mainly native as well as Western), Turn-Based Strategy games, Visual Novels, and (overlapping with the previous categories) Eroge. In fact, the PC-98's game library most likely contains a greater proportion of H-games than that of any other platform (beware of NSFW images likely to turn up in searches). By the 1990s, the PC-98 had a very large library of video games, with thousands of titles, though only a small fraction of these games were ever released outside of Japan.

Oh yeah, and the Touhou Project series started here. So there's that, too.

The PC-98's main computer rivals in Japan were the Sharp X68000 and FM Towns, released in 1987 and 1989, respectively. Despite the X68000 and FM Towns both being considerably more powerful (almost Arcade Game quality, in fact) than the PC-98, neither computer was able to dethrone the PC-98 as the Japanese market leader (but the X68000 did come close). It wasn't until the late 1990s that the IBM PC finally ended the PC-98's reign over the Japanese PC market. Despite that, and NEC's later commitment to the IBM-compatible standards, they didn't discontinue the PC-98 till 2003, which at that time the platform was pretty much dead in Japan.

An attempt to export the PC-98 platform was made early in the machine's life, believe it or not. The platform were sold outside Japan under the APC (Advanced Personal Computer) series moniker by NEC, specifically APC-III. Their status of being PC-compatible-but-not-quite caused quite the headache to unaware buyers and ultimately caused the platform to fail outside Japan- while most basic text mode programs made for the IBM PC like WordStar and Lotus 1-2-3 would run without issues on the platform, and while the APC machines do emulate the PC CGA video modes in a bid by NEC to increase compatibility, games and programs that expected the hardware addresses to be identical to that of a PC and tried to access them directly would act up and cause things like spontaneous reboots and hardlocks. NEC quickly discontinued export of the PC-98 platform and started making true PC compatibles for markets outside Japan soon after. Additionally, the fact that NEC’s copies of MS-DOS were copy-protected to ensure it won’t boot on non-PC-98 (and thus non-APC) computers led to further misunderstandings and further contributed to the platform failing outside Japan.note 

The PC-98 platform, like its cousin the PC, was also a constantly evolving platform, and followed an identical CPU evolution path (ending with using a Pentium processor). Like its western counterpart, the base audio is just a PC speaker hooked up to a timer, with better audio added on via a card for the expansion slot. While the west's standard for audio cards went to third party sound card manufacturers like Adlib (which used a Yamaha YM3812) then Creative Lab’s SoundBlasternote , things were somewhat different in the east where the sound cards were made by NEC themselves and sold as a bundle with the PC-98 machinenote - the defacto sound card for the PC-98 is one with a Yamaha YM2203 chip, and later a Yamaha YM2608. NEC would also eventually discontinue support for the distinct Yamaha audio cards and proprietary graphics chip for a Crystal WSS-compatible audio card (which uses the new Audio Modem Riser slot introduced with the AC'97 specification) and Cirrus Logic video chipset, although the longevity of the C-Bus meant one could still add the audio cards back if needed(however, these sound cards were not supported in Windows). Some models even started gaining support for Western hardware like PCI cards[1]. And Creative Labs ultimately even made a SoundBlaster variant that has the C-Bus connector, opening up the computer to running western games with sound. Ultimately, it could be argued that the PC-98 platform simply folded back into the mainstream PC platform as the last models too ran Windows - first Windows 95, then Windows 98, and ultimately Windows 2000. And because Windows abstracts the hardware from software, software written for PC-98 Windows will run the same on IBM PC Compatible Windowsnote  Likewise, the anemic 640x400 8-color mode was absorbed into the VESA standards specification and became supported on countless graphics cards that followed the VESA specification. Furthermore, the addition of the sleep and soft-on ability of ACPI-enabled desktops where the machine could be powered on and put to sleep from the keyboard were also ported from later PC-98 machines, prior to that these features were exclusive to laptops. The group of keys on a desktop keyboard that enables these features were even unofficially named "Keyboard 98", a name used by several manufacturers to this day.

NEC continued selling IBM-based PCs in Japan, after they retired the PC-98 line for good. In terms of change, they have forgone the proprietary BIOS for the predecessors for global PC-compatible ones and use the regular Windows for the Western computers (even foregoing DOS/V as modern versions of Windows support the Japanese language natively) and with the same kernel and bootloader you'd find in a Western PC, and today use an UEFI firmware that is identical to the Western counterparts, thus practically making them indistinguishable from other modern PCs of different makers. The changes in Windows' support for hardware, beginning with Windows XP nullifying PC-98 support, made the platform completely obsolete and led to the aforementioned discontinuation.


Technical Specifications

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     PC-9801/APC-III 
  • Intel 8086 or compatible NEC V30 clocked at 4.77MHz
    • Has a socket for an optional Intel 8087 maths co-processor
  • 2x NEC µPD7220 GDC
    • The primary µPD7220 is used for generating text characters while the secondary µPD7220 is used for rendering graphics.
    • Supports all PC CGA modes plus an extra graphics mode with 8 colors from a palette of 4096 at 640x400. Can be expanded to get 256 colors from a palette of 4096 at 640x400 at the expense of using more system RAM if you have an EMS card to offset- the JEGA driver for Windows 3.1 actually uses the 256 color mode.
    • Also supports hardware assisted scrolling, integer scaling and blitting over a decade before the features became available on western PCs.
  • Timer-driven PC Speaker, single channel PWM.
    • PC-9801-26 3-channel FM+3 channel PSG card can be added on via C-Bus and one is often sold as a bundle with the machine. Certain models have the PC-9801-26 integrated into the motherboard.
    • Other possible add-on sound cards are a C-Bus version of the Roland LAPC-I sound card and C-Bus versions of the SoundBlaster series of sound cards.
  • 2x 5.25" floppy drive; Double Sided, Double Density as standard.
    • A 20MB hard drive can be purchased as an extra.
  • 128k standard, 640k maximum
    • C-Bus EMS cards do exist and can be purchased to add even more memory to the machine, these cards use the C-Bus slot but otherwise works just like their western ISA counterparts.
  • C-Bus slots- a 100-pin expansion slot that is incompatible with the ISA standard used in the west. Usually used for EMS RAM cards, hard drive adapters, network adapters and sound cards.

     PC- 9821 
  • Intel Pentium, up to 233MHz
  • Cirrus Logic SVGA graphics, VESA BIOS Extensions 1.0 compliant.
  • Up to 128MB of EDO RAM.
  • Timer-driven PC Speaker, single channel PWM.
    • Crystal CS4231-based sound card, connected to the motherboard via a Audio Modem Riser slot. Windows Sound System and AC'97 compliant.
    • PC-9801-73, PC-9801-86 or PC-9801-118 sound card optional.
    • Other possible add-on sound cards are a C-Bus version of the Roland LAPC-I sound card and even C-Bus versions of the SoundBlaster series of sound cards.
  • 2x 3.5" MF2HD disks, 1.44MB
  • IDE hard drive of up to 120GB in size.
  • IDE 8x CD-ROM drive standard
  • C-Bus slots- a 100-pin expansion slot that is incompatible with the ISA standard used in the west. Usually used for SCSI adapters, network adapters and sound cards.
  • Certain models may have a single low profile PCI slot for use with any PCI cards that fit.

Games that originally appeared on the PC-98 include:

Ports:


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