


IP bans will be reconsidered on a case-by-case basis if you were running a bot and did not understand the consequences, but typically not for spamming, hacking, or other abuse. If you are responsible for one of the above issues. Having an excessive number of banned accounts in a very short timeframe.Running a web bot/spider that downloaded a very large number of pages - more than could possibly justified as "personal use".Automated spam (advertising) or intrustion attempts (hacking).There are currently 799 games on this list.Your current IP address has been blocked due to bad behavior, which generally means one of the following:


Its unknown how many X68000 units were sold in total during its commercial life span. Originally released at JP¥369,000, later models were sold for considerably lower prices. Games were also distributed through the Takeru software vending machines, which allowed users to write commercial titles or dōjin soft on blank 5.25" floppy disks. Multiple revisions were later released that included several enhancements compared to the original model, with the last model being released in 1993 before being officially discontinued in the market, though games for the platform kept being created. Many add-ons were released including networking, SCSI, memory upgrades, CPU enhancements and MIDI I/O boards, among others that increased the performance of the system. The following list contains all of the known games released commercially for the X68000 platform.įeaturing an operating system written by Hudson Soft called Human68k and bundled with a conversion of Konami's 1987 arcade game Gradius as the pack-in game at launch, the X68000 was very similar to arcade system boards of the time in terms of hardware and served as the development machine for Capcom's CP System. It was the second and last computer to be released under the Sharp brand, succeeding the X1 series. The X68000 is a fourth generation home computer developed and manufactured by Sharp Corporation, first released only in Japan on March 28, 1987.
