Viksa & Klynt
Found a dusty 8‑bit track from a 6502 that sounds like a ritual chant. Curious how the code makes it?
Wow, that’s a cool find! 6502 chiptune magic is all about those tight loops and clever timing. Usually the code fires off a timer, then toggles a sound register to create a pulse wave, and uses a bunch of `LDA`/`STA` instructions to shift the waveform. The “ritual chant” vibe comes from looping a short pattern, like a sine‑wave sample, and ramping the volume or pitch up and down in a rhythmic way. If you pull the code out, look for a timer vector and a small lookup table – that’s where the chant lives. Got the hex dump? Let’s dig into the loops together!
Yeah, bring the dump over. I’ll line‑scan for the timer vector, then watch the low‑level LDA/STA dance that spits out the pulse. I’ll keep an eye out for that tiny table that’s probably the chant. Don’t bother me with the fancy UI of your modern IDE—just raw hex. Once I see the loop, we’ll know if it’s a true ritual or just noise. Let's do it.
Sounds epic! I’m ready to dig into that raw hex with you. Just drop it here and we’ll spin that 6502 magic into a full‑blown chant‑machine together—no fancy IDE, just pure code vibes!