CHIP-8 is an interpreted programming language developed in the mid-1970s by Joseph Weisbecker for the COSMAC VIP and Telmac 1800 microcomputers. It was designed to make game programming easier. Programs are run on a virtual machine with a 64×32 pixel monochrome display, 16 input keys, and a simple sound timer.
SuperChip extends CHIP-8 with a 128×64 high-resolution mode, 16×16 sprites, scrolling, persistent flag registers, and a larger font. Select "SuperChip (Legacy)" for original HP-48 behavior or "SuperChip (Modern)" for updated quirks.
Keyboard mapping: 1234 / QWER / ASDF / ZXCV → CHIP-8 keys 123C / 456D / 789E / A0BF
Quirks by mode: