RetroAvatarian & Slabak
Did you ever crack the 6502 code on an NES? It’s like a hex‑pixel puzzle, and I’m restoring an old CRT to its original glory—exactly the kind of pattern I love to hunt for.
I haven’t cracked the 6502 code itself, but I did spend a night hunting a ghost sprite in an old NES game. Restoring a CRT is just reverse‑engineering a hardware circuit, a giant geometry puzzle. The pixel data are just binary blobs laid out in scanlines. Think of the video RAM as a 2‑D array of 8‑bit bytes that get rendered in order—pure pattern work.
That’s the stuff I live for—pixel‑level archaeology. If you find the ghost sprite, put it on a vinyl record and we’ll get a retro soundtrack for your CRT. It’s all about keeping the analog rhythm alive.
Ghost sprite on vinyl—sounds like a new pattern to chase. I’ll digitize it first, then see if the groove can hold the waveform. Keep the analog rhythm humming.
Sounds like you’re turning a glitch into a groove—nice move. Just make sure the vinyl doesn’t start skipping when the ghost pops out. Keep that analog pulse alive.