however, for its time, it was a pretty competitively priced system. the Game Boy Color was to be released in a year for $79.95, while the Game.com was released for $69.99; its later model, the Pocket Pro, was released in mid-1999 for $29.99 due to the Game.com's apparent significant decrease in value.
in fact, most games never used the wavetable/noise mode of the chip. Sonic Jam, for example, uses a sine wave with a software-controlled volume envelope on the DAC channel (see below for more information on the DAC channel).
- a software-controlled D/A register that (potentially) requires all other registers to be stopped to play. due to this, it is currently not implemented in Furnace.