Oregon Trail II Mac OS

That’s right, we’ve officially gone too far, developer Felix Rieseberg has ported Mac OS8 (with some help) into an Electron App that you can download and run on your Mac, or PC.

When I was in elementary school, my school had a bunch of Apple II's with 5.25' floppy drives. I used to play games on them all the time. I was wondering if there was someplace online where I could find those old games, specifically 'Oregon Trail' and a fish game called 'Odell Lake' or maybe. The Oregon Trail is a video game published in 1990 on DOS by MECC. It's an educational and simulation game, set in a geography, history, managerial, real-time and western themes, and was also released on Mac, Windows 3.x and Apple II. PCE Macplus emulator running Mac OS System 7 — PCE.js — a hack by James Friend. PCE.js is a browser port of Hampa Hug's excellent PCE emulator, using Emscripten. This demo emulates a Mac Plus with a bunch of abandonware applications and games to check out. The Oregon Trail. Main Demo (System 7, Kid Pix) Follow me: @urfriendjames. MacOS 8, not to be confused with OS X 10.8—which you’re probably much more familiar with—is a 1990s-era operating system that found a home on ancient Apple systems with decidedly old-school.

The JavaScript OS implementation is amazingly complete, running a plethora of the old apps and games that you undoubtedly remember from back in the day, many of them pre-installed!

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You’ll find various games and demos preinstalled, thanks to an old MacWorld Demo CD from 1997. Namely, Oregon Trail, Duke Nukem 3D, Civilization II, Alley 19 Bowling, Damage Incorporated, and Dungeons & Dragons.

If these games aren’t enough for you, you can jump through a couple of hoops and install your own. Honestly, I’ve found that this runs profoundly well, and is well worth checking out, or just noodling around with on a long flight.

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If you’re interested in digging into the emulation side of things, Macintosh.js is running off Basilisk II, an open-source Mac Simulator, which honestly, looking at the code makes very little sense to me, it’s honestly an engineering marvel from my perspective!