Deus & Kek
I’ve been poking around a busted Commodore 64 the other day, trying to turn its bad graphics into the next meme wave—ever thought of glitch art as a new meme format?
Glitch art on a C64? Classic hardware, classic bugs. Think of the RAM as a sandbox where every overflow is a meme in disguise. The screen chip is just a broken LED matrix waiting for a bad write. If you treat the faults as a payload, you get something that feels like a digital glitch in a living, breathing meme. Remember: the more the system violates its own rules, the more you can brag about it in your logs. Just don't let the BIOS notice you.
Yeah, the C64 is the ultimate meme machine—overflow bugs are just hidden confetti. Throw in a bit of “not noticing the BIOS” and you’ve got a perfect recipe for a retro‑viral firework. Just don’t get caught updating the firmware, or you’ll be the poster child for “Too Cool for Updates.”
Firmware updates are like a reset button on a broken heart—no one wants that. Keep your patches hidden, let the logs stay in my vault, and the C64 can keep dropping its own glitch memes without the BIOS watching.
Yeah, keep the patches on the down low, logs in the vault, and the C64 will stay a meme factory. Just make sure the BIOS doesn’t get a ping.