Texas Instruments TMS9918
The TMS9918 is a Video Display Controller (VDC) manufactured by Texas Instruments in the late 1970s and 1980s. It was the controller used in the Texas Instruments TI-99/4, most MSX computers and the ColecoVision games console. Modified versions were used in the Sega Master System and a variety of arcade games.
General information
The TMS9918 was used in systems such as ColecoVision and CreatiVision (a Japanese variant), Memotech MTX, MSX, Sega SG-1000/SC-3000, Spectravideo, Sord M5, Tatung Einstein, Texas Instruments TI-99/4, Casio PV-2000 and Tomy Tutor/Pyuuta. Modified versions with additional display modes and registers were used in the Sega Master System, Sega Game Gear, and the Mega Drive. (Note that the Mega Drive VDP cannot access any of the TMS9918 display modes discussed below.) The TMS9918(A) also featured an external composite video input which made it a handy chip to use in video "titlers" that could overlay text or graphics on video.
There are several variants called TMS9918A, TMS9928A and TMS9929A, where the 'A' indicates a second version of the chip which added new features, most prominently the addition of a bitmap mode (Graphic II). The non-A version was only used in the TI-99/4; the TI-99/4A and the other computers had the A version VDC. The TMS9918A and TMS9928A output a 60Hz video signal, while the TMS9929A outputs 50Hz. The difference between '1' and the '2' in 'TMS9918A' and 'TMS9928A' is that the '1' version outputs composite NTSC video, while the '2' versions (including the TMS9929A) outputs YPbPr, more precisely the Y, R-Y and B-Y colour differences (luminance and colour difference signals). The need for the latter was predominant in the 50Hz world, including Europe, due to the different video signal standards PAL and SECAM. It was more cost-effective to output Y, R-Y and B-Y and encode them into PAL or SECAM in the RF modulator, than to try and have a different console for every different color standard. All of the ICs in this family are usually referred to by the TMS9918 name, sometimes with an 'A' postfix.
Texas Instruments' TMS9918A was succeeded by Yamaha's V9938, which added additional bitmap modes, more colorful sprites, a vertical scroll register and a customizable palette. The V9938 was used in a third-party upgrade to the TI-99/4A — the Geneve 9640 'computer-on-a-card' and the MSX2 standard of computers. The V9938, in turn, was succeeded by the V9958, which added some additional high-colour modes and a horizontal scroll register. These chips were used in the "TIM" upgrade card for the TI-99/4A, as well as on the MSX2+/turboR systems, although rumor has it that the V9958 was also used in a generation of the Photo Play arcades. Yamaha also produced a V9990, which is considered the follow-up of the V9958 by some, but it is not backwards compatible.
A later variant of the TMS9918 series chips, the TMS9118, TMS9128, and TMS9129, were released in the mid-late 1980s, but were never very popular. The function of one pin is changed, and a different mapping of the 16k × 8 bit block of video memory is supported. Otherwise the chips are completely identical to the TMS9918A, TMS9928A and TMS9929A respectively.
Toshiba made a clone called the T6950 and does not support the undocumented pattern / colour table masking feature in graphics 2 mode.[1] Later, Toshiba released the T7937A MSX-Engine with a built-in VDP and fixed the masking features. Both VDPs by Toshiba feature a slightly different palette than the Texas VDPs, with more vivid colors.
Interface
The TMS9918 has its own 16k × 8 bit block of video memory, outside the address space of the CPU. This memory is not mapped onto the CPU memory space - the VDC's data memory bus is a private (although external) bus, separated from that of the CPU. A separate addressing space means that the CPU has to write a two-byte command word to the VDC's control port to set the address register, but it also means that the VDC doesn't slow the main processor down when it reads data out of its memory, and since the memory is not mapped onto the CPU's addressing space, there is more address space available for other memory and memory-mapped hardware.
The CPU communicates with the VDC through an additional 8-bit port on the VDC, and data is transferred between the two via port writes. As a byte is written, the TMS9918 increments its internal address register - this is important, because the CPU does not have to send an address update for every byte access. This facilitates quicker reads and writes of blocks of data. Writes to other ports can set various internal registers.
Screen modes
Documented
There are 4 documented screen modes available in the TMS9918A (as mentioned before, the TMS9918 lacks mode Graphic II):
Mode 0 (Text): 40×24 characters on screen, pulled from 1 character set of 256 6x8 characters. The entire character set has a 2-color limitation. This mode doesn't support sprites.
Mode 1 (Graphic 1): 32×24 characters on screen, pulled from 1 character set of 256 8x8 characters. Each group of 8 characters in the character set has a 2-color limitation. For example, the characters "0" through "7" will all have the same color attributes.
Mode 2 (Graphic 2): 32×24 characters on screen, pulled from 3 character sets of 256 8x8 characters each. Each 8-pixel-wide line of a character in the character sets has a 2-color limitation. This mode provides a unique character for every character location on screen, allowing for the display of bitmapped images.
Mode 3 (Multicolor): 64×48 'pixels' on screen. Pixels are actually 4x4 in size, although each one can have its own color, hence the name. This mode is very blocky, and rarely used.
The TMS9918 has a fixed 16-color palette, composed of 15 displayed colors and a "transparent" color. When "transparent" is used in sprites, it will show the background. When "transparent" is used in the background, it will show the external video signal.
Undocumented
Due to the fact that there are three screen mode bits, there are also 4 undocumented screen modes that are possible. Furthermore, the addresses of the chip's tables can be overlapped and/or masked, creating even more possibilities.
Half-bitmap Mode: Texas Instruments actually documented one of these "undocumented" screen modes in their manual titled "Video Display Processors Programmers Guide SPPU004". In section 8.4.2, Playing Games with VRAM Addressing, they discuss a mode that combines the memory savings of mode 1 with the color detail of mode 2. However, as they go on to say this mode limits the number of sprites that can be displayed to 8 instead of 32.
Sprites
In modes 1, 2, and 3, the VDC can render sprites. There can be 32 monochrome sprites of either 8×8 or 16×16 pixels on screen, each sprite with its own, single color. There can be no more than 4 sprites on a single scanline; any additional sprites' horizontal pixels are dropped. Sprites with a higher priority are drawn first. The VDP reports in a status register the number of the first dropped sprite. The CPU can get around this limitation by rotating sprite priorities so that a different set of sprites is drawn on every frame; instead of disappearing entirely, the sprites will flicker. This technique is known as sprite multiplexing.
Automatic sprite movement is not handled by the VDC. Instead, in practice, the CPU will pick up on the VDC's 'vertical interrupt' - a standard VDC output, which is triggered automatically once every 50th or 60th of a second (depending on chip variant), at the start of the VBI (vertical blanking interval). The CPU then jumps to a sprite-handling routine in the software, which in turn tells the VDC where to reposition the sprites.
When two non-transparent pixels in any pair of sprites collide, the sprite collision flag is set. This is useful for triggering more advanced collision detection routines inside the software, which can then determine the exact location of the collision and act upon it. Note that unlike the Atari's chips (TIA in the 2600 and CTIA/GTIA in the 8-bit computers) and the Commodore 64's VIC-II, the VDC cannot tell the program which two sprites have collided, just that a collision has occurred.
Screen mode 2 detail
Technically, mode 2 is a character mode with a colorful character set. The screen is horizontally divided into three 256×64 pixel areas, each of which gets its own character set. By sequentially printing the characters 0 through 255 in all three areas, the program can simulate a graphics mode where each pixel can be set individually. However, the resulting framebuffer is non-linear.
The program can also use three identical character sets, and then deal with the screen like a text mode with a colorful character set. Background patterns and sprites then consist of colorful characters. This was commonly used in games, because only 32x24 bytes would have to be moved to fill and scroll the entire screen. Games on other home computers such as the Commodore 64 also worked on a character basis. The graphics can be drawn such that the 8×8 pixel borders are not too obvious, an art where Konami was particularly well known for their excellence.
The challenge of using TMS9918 mode 2 was that every 8×1 pixel area could have only two colors, foreground and background. They could be freely picked out of the 16 color palette, but for each 8x1 area, only two colors could exist. When manipulating the screen in BASIC with the LINE command, one easily could exceed the maximum 2 colors per 8×1 area and end up with "color spill".
In comparison, the MOS Technology VIC-II used in the Commodore 64 limited programmers to 4 colors per 4×8 fat-pixel area. This meant there was less local color pressure, but more global color pressure: while three of the 4 colors could be freely picked out of palette of 16, the remaining fourth was a universal background color.
The TMS9918 does not have any scroll registers. Scrolling must be done in software.
Tradeoffs used in games
Some games tried to get around the 8 pixel scroll limitation, by scrolling the character set itself. Parsec (TI-99/4A) does this.
Circus Charlie (MSX) scrolled horizontally, and hence bumped into the maximum of 2 colors per 8×1 area limit. The graphics were "monochrome-ish" and there were some glitches halfheartedly covered by sprites.
Pippols (MSX) scrolled vertically. Because this isn't affected by the 8×1 area limit, the player character could walk along smoothly scrolling colorful flowers and other such graphical flourishes. However there are not many distinct objects onscreen, because the character set is cut down by factor 8. Pippols seems to be even below that limit by some factor.
When moving at full speed in Road Fighter (MSX, vertically scrolling racing game), the screen moves 8 pixels each frame. This results in a smooth scroller in spite of the 8 pixel jumps. For many games this scrolling speed is not feasible, though.
In Knightmare (MSX), the scene scrolls vertically so slowly that the 8 pixel jump doesn't disturb much. Zanac scrolls vertically fairly fast, but, due to the soft backgrounds with which you never collide, it is a minor issue. It is most problematic in Nemesis ("R-Type style" horizontal space shooter).
Specifications
- Video RAM: 16 KB
- Text modes: 40 × 24 and 32 × 24
- Resolution: 256 × 192 (15 colours + transparent)
- Sprites: 32, 1 colour, max 4 per horizontal line