C'mon ... you can get a YMF262 OPL3 FM chip + YAC512 DAC for $1.60 on fleabay ... we could totally blow-away all of those scummy MSX and Genesis guys!
Well, on 2nd look, I think that we'd actually need a YMF289B OPL3 FM chip + YAC513 DAC, in order to meet the fast memory access timings of the PCE, and those cost a little bit more ... approx $6 per pair.
Oh I think we'll already blow them away by turning the PCE into a sampler without any extra hardware ;3
Errr ... not at that CPU-cost, you won't!
You're just creating a CPU-pumped soft-synth rompler, in the same way that you can on any old hardware that supports a DAC output and a reasonable memory layout for the samples.
It could be done on an Amiga just as well.
Now ... as I've said, the 4-channel fixed-rate playback into a 10-bit output using 2 PSG channels ... *that* interests me. That may well be practical for in-game usage.
Either way, whatever the cost/performance tradeoff a particular developer/musician team is willing to make, it should be easy to modify Huzak so that it'll use the Deflemask data for whichever channels you wish, and let some other code handle the mixing for the other channels ... or just build the capability into Huzak itself as optional choices at build-time.
The whole point is to have the dmf2pce converter and the driver itself both be Open Source so that anyone can abuse them as much as they desire.
I get that Elmer's remark was a bit tongue in cheek but, really, MSX's secret weapon is the ability to combine PSG, SCC, and FM together, assuming you want to be that mental and support 3 sound chips simultaneously.
Yep, totally tongue-in-cheek.
I can't see anyone being interested-enough to produce an FM HuCard, even though it would (theoretically) be a fairly easy thing to do on a DUO/SuperCDROM.
From my personal POV, the MSX's base AY-3-8910 PSG is a total piece-of-sh*t (I've used it before), and Konami's SCC is pretty-close to our PCE PSG, so the only real extra that the MSX has (if you buy the add-on) is the Yamaha 8950 9-channel, 2-operator OPL1 FM chip.
So, if we added a Yamaha 289B 18-channel, 4-operator OPL3 FM chip, then we'd totally blow-away the MSX hardware, and actually beat the Sharp X68000's 8-channel, 4-operator YM2151 (which, yes, was also available as an MSX add-on)!
BTW ... I absolutely *love* the sound of Yamaha's 4-operator FM synths.