![]() Well, DOS games work fine in the emulator. Yes, that’s how copy protection was done back in the day: you could copy the game, but it will ask you for certain text from specific page in the printed manual, which you normally don’t even think of photocopying. ![]() The game launches, and I even was able to get to the screen where you have to enter some text from the printed manual to confirm you got a legal copy. I know that the name of the game executable is bugs.exe. After copying the game, go back to DosBox, change directory to Dos where our game is and launch the executable. Don’t be afraid of it, despite the old-fashioned look, which personally I greatly enjoy, two-panel file managers is the best thing that happened to personal computers in the last 25 years, and not those coloured pictures for faggots. By the way, I use Far Manager to work with files. Well, let’s create a DOS folder and throw in some old DOS game, like Battle Bugs. By default, DosBox obviously mounts the root of internal SD-Card as drive c. ![]() Yes, with your fingers, on the keyboard, send the text command c: to the command prompt and press enter. I first wanted to install gDosBox, but the description says it is based on aDosBox, so lets install aDosBox. Playstore has a bunch of DosBox flavours, some paid, some free. Well, first of all you have to install that emulator. ![]() How to run DOS emulator on Android so you could play old computer games on your Android phone or tablet?
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