Chronicle Keepers: The Dreaming Garden for iPad, iPhone, Android, Mac & PC! As the daughter of a legendary chronicle keeper, powerful foes are working against you!! XSplit VCam features a powerful background changer and green screen. The app supports JPEGs, GIFs, PNGs or even full web pages, giving you unlimited personalization options for background replacement. You can apply background blur, too! It’s the fastest alternative to a green screen. Perfect for content creators.
Green INC. demo(?) may contain content you must be 18+ to view.
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I'm gonna be up front, this is a game about being fucked by Goblins. Or it will be, this was rushed to make it to Goblin week. Sorry.
I'm learning to code and I'm doing all the art myself.
TL;DR
Goblins want to rule the world but running it. Make deals with major towns to one day rule over it. Fuck allot of people along the way both literal and figuratively.
Enjoy the porn as you play :P
A LOT is possible to change.
https://www.patreon.com/GrayBeast if you want to support
Status | In development |
Platforms | Windows, macOS |
Rating | |
Author | GrayBeast |
Genre | Adventure, Visual Novel |
Tags | 2D, demo, Gay, goblin, NSFW, orginal-art, patreon, renpy, xxx |
it's Ren'py so all you need to do is extract the file and then click the ren'py symbol
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How many time has passed now?... 9 months?... huh, i thought it was more time....
there will be, I'm just very slow and don't have much free time ;_;
oh! And will there be a gay male protagonist option and a lesbienic one too? I feel giving that choice could attract a wider fanbase.
The option would be good, though I might be showing bias
however you like. Though i think focusing on being neutral between the sexualities would be nice. Im a gay guy and have a bit of a phobia for the nude female body.
Also known as | M0001W |
---|---|
Manufacturer | Apple Computer, Inc. |
Product family | Compact Macintosh |
Release date | September 10, 1984; 36 years ago |
Introductory price | US$2,795 (equivalent to $6,880 in 2019) |
Discontinued | April 14, 1986 |
Operating system | 1.0, 1.1, 2.0, 2.1, 3.0, 3.2,[1]3.3, 3.4, 4.0, 4.1 |
CPU | Motorola 68000 @ 7.8338 MHz(Effectively 6 MHz) |
Memory | 512 KB RAM (built-in) |
Display | 9 in (23 cm) monochrome, 512 × 342 |
Predecessor | Macintosh 128K |
Successor | Macintosh 512Ke Macintosh Plus |
TheMacintosh 512K is a personal computer that was designed, manufactured and sold by Apple Computer, inc. from September 1984 to April 1986. It is the first update to the original Macintosh 128K. It was virtually identical to the previous Macintosh, differing primarily in the amount of built-in random-access memory. The increased memory turned the Macintosh into a more business-capable computer and gained the ability to run more software.
The Mac 512K originally shipped with Macintosh System 1.1 but was able to run all versions of Mac OS up to System 4.1. It was replaced by the Macintosh 512Ke and the Macintosh Plus. All support for the Mac 512K was discontinued on September 1, 1998.
Like the Macintosh 128K before it, the 512K contained a Motorola 68000 connected to a 512 KBDRAM by a 16-bitdata bus. Though the memory had been quadrupled, it could not be upgraded. The large increase earned it the nickname Fat Mac. A 64 KB ROM chip boosts the effective memory to 576 KB, but this is offset by the display's 22 KB framebuffer, which is shared with the DMA video controller. This shared arrangement reduces CPU performance by up to 35%. It shared a revised logic board with the re-badged Macintosh 128K (previously just called the Macintosh), which streamlined manufacturing. The resolution of the display was the same, at 512 × 342.
Apple sold a memory upgrade for the Macintosh 128K for $995 initially, and reduced the price when 256 kb DRAM prices fell months later.[2]
The applications MacPaint and MacWrite were still bundled with the Mac. Soon after this model was released, several other applications became available, including MacDraw, MacProject, Macintosh Pascal and others. In particular, Microsoft Excel, which was written specifically for the Macintosh, required a minimum of 512 KB of RAM, but solidified the Macintosh as a serious business computer. Models with the enhanced ROM also supported Apple's Switcher, allowing cooperative multitasking among (necessarily few) applications.
The LaserWriter printer became available shortly after the 512K's introduction, as well as the number pad, mic, tablet, keyboard, mouse, basic mouse, and much more. It utilized Apple's built-in networking scheme LocalTalk which allows sharing of devices among several users. The 512K was the oldest Macintosh capable of supporting Apple's AppleShare built-in file sharing network, when introduced in 1987. The expanded memory in the 512K allowed it to better handle large word-processing documents and make better use of the graphical user interface and generally increased speed over the 128K model.
Color Systems Technology used an army of 512K units connected to a custom Intel 80186-based machine to colorize numerous black-and-white films in the mid-1980s.[3]
The original 512K could accept Macintosh system software up to version 4.1; System Software 5 was possible if used with the Hard Disk 20.
An updated version replaced the Macintosh 512K and debuted as the Macintosh 512K enhanced in April 1986. It differed from the original 512K in that it had an 800 KB floppy disk drive[4] and the same improved ROM as the Macintosh Plus. With the exception of the new model number (M0001E), they were otherwise cosmetically identical. The stock 512K could also use an 800 KB floppy disk drive as well as the Hard Disk 20, the first hard disk manufactured by Apple exclusively for use with the 512K, but required a special system file (not required by the 512Ke) that loaded the improved ROM code into RAM, thus reducing the RAM available for other uses. Apple offered an upgrade kit which replaced the floppy disk drive and ROMs, essentially turning it into a 512Ke. One further OEM upgrade replaced the logic board and the rear case entirely with that of the Macintosh Plus.[5]
As with the original Macintosh, the 512K was designed with no slots for upgrade boards and had no hard-disk controller, so the few internal upgrades that were available for the 512K, such as General Computer's US$2,795 Hyperdrive hard drive, had to plug directly into the 68000 processor socket.[6] Other such upgrades included 'snap-on' SCSI cards and RAM upgrades of 2 MB or more.
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