otvdm (aka winevdm) is popular for that these days.good luck running it without a vc or something like dosbox, it's rough
not for speed sensitive stuff, which i think at least skifree is, and tetrisotvdm (aka winevdm) is popular for that these days.
https://github.com/otya128/winevdm/releases
Have you actually tried it? I understand it is a full CPU emulator and if anything it would be too slow.not for speed sensitive stuff, which i think at least skifree is, and tetris
last time i tried it it had a pretty inconvenient setup, so i can't really say from experience, aside from mixed compatability. using a VM, PCem or doxbox is still better imo (or real hardware if you're weird like me)Have you actually tried it? I understand it is a full CPU emulator and if anything it would be too slow.
But in those cases you'd also have to setup DOS and Windows 3.x yourself, which would be very inconvenient (unless you find a preconfigured image).using a VM, PCem or doxbox is still better imo (or real hardware if you're weird like me)
I think that, if you go by mouse + keyboard presses, it's competitive or better with installing LTSC and then going through group policy to turn off the remaining crapsetup DOS and Windows 3.x yourself, which would be very inconvenient
maybe the OP have an actual 486 or something equivalentgood luck running it without a vc or something like dosbox, it's rough
Some form of external program is absolutely necessary as, unlike 32-bit programs, it is otherwise impossible to run 16-bit programs on 64-bit Windows, no matter how many things you turn off. (Unless things suddenly changed when I wasn't looking.)it's competitive or better with installing LTSC and then going through group policy to turn off the remaining crap
I was going to mention that, but some of the reviews seem very displeased with it.I do also see it is free on Steam these days
linky
You want to buy 30-year-old software that won't run on current computers without considerable trickery?well i wanted to buy it