This repository has been archived, since more modern DOSBox forks with integer scaling exist now. Most notably DOSBox-X - not only does it support pixel-perfect rednering (via output=openglpp
), there are also save states, GUI, Windows 98 support, 3fdx Voodoo 1 emulation, better OPL emulation and more. I recommend using DOSBox-X as a more future-proof option, but this repository will be kept archived for anyone interested.
Original readme below.
This is a modified version of DOSBox with focus on super crisp visual output. It uses integer scaling to produce homogenous pixels, supports VSYNC, plays nice with high-DPI displays and adds other enhancements like savestates.
💾 Download
Get the latest Windows version or check the releases tab.
In case DOSBox doesn't run (VCRUNTUME140.dll missing
error), you need to install the Microsoft Visual C++ 2017 Runtime Library.
This mode makes the rendered image fill as much of your screen as possible while keeping it scaled to the nearest integer. GPU scaling is used instead of relying on software scalers.
The original DOSBox also renders a stretched image to a power-of-two texture, which is then stretched to the screen. This mod creates a texture with exact dimensions. This improves the image quality at the cost of breaking compatibility with very old video cards.
When aspect=false
, square pixels are produced (1x1, 2x2, 3x3, etc.), which is what works best for most (but not all) games.
When aspect=true
, the aspect ratio is approximated using rectangular pixels. For instance 320x200 on a 1920x1080 resolution will use 4x5 pixels. This yields a 4:3.125 aspect ratio instead of the intended 4:3, but the difference is only 4%.
A feature used by modern games that relies on the OS to provide VSYNC. This eliminates screen tearing.
This DOSBox fork is DPI-aware. When using 150% scaling, the image is no longer blurred.
Savestates allow you to save (Alt+F5
) and load (Alt+F9
) any game whenever you like. Note that this is an experimental feature and some games may crash. The credit for implementing this feature goes to ZenJu, tikalat, ykhwong, gandhig and bruenor41. I used the code found here and tweaked it to compile with Visual Studio.
A configuration file with sane defaults is provided. No need to fiddle around with settings, just run it and have fun. The folder games
is automatically mounted.
The only thing you may want to adjust per-game is the speed of the emulator (Ctrl+F11
/Ctrl+F12
). Some games require very low speed (ie. Lemmings needs ~6000 cycles), some may require more speed.
You can just use the provided config, but if you have your own special dosbox.conf
, make sure your values match the ones below to use the new features. Savestates work automatically, but you need to rebuild your mapper file, if you use one.
[sdl]
fullscreen=true
fulldouble=true
fullresolution=desktop
output=openglnb # ⚠ important: pixel-perfect scaling only works with OpenGL!
pixelperfect=true # set to false to make the image fill as much of the screen as possible
borderless=true # prevents screen tearing; set to false to disable borderless fullscreen
[render]
aspect=false # change to true if circles in your game look like ellipses
scaler=none
All the dependencies are included in the source code (under lib
). You need to build them before you can build DOSBox. I used Visual Studio 2017, but older versions should be fine also. Build the projects in the following order:
lib\libpng-1.6.29\projects\vstudio\vstudio.sln
- use the "Release Library" configurationlib\SDL-1.2.15\VisualC\SDL.sln
lib\SDL_net-1.2.7\VisualC\SDL_net.sln
- requires MFC to be installedvisualc_net\dosbox.sln
- requires SDL.dll built in the previous step to be copied next to the .exe file