The hardware that made the music of a generation
The SID chip gave the Commodore 64 three independent synthesis voices with programmable multi-mode filters, producing a warm, slightly unstable analogue sound that composers and electronic musicians have treasured for over four decades.
The YM2612 gave the Sega Mega Drive six channels of 4-operator FM synthesis, producing the warm-metallic, harmonically complex sound that composers like Yuzo Koshiro turned into some of the finest electronic music of the 16-bit era.
Sony's SPC700 gave the SNES eight channels of ADPCM sample-based synthesis running on a completely separate audio CPU, enabling composers to approach near-orchestral quality and producing some of the most beloved game music of any era.
The Ricoh 2A03 integrated the NES audio processing unit with a modified 6502 CPU on a single die, providing five sound channels whose characteristic square waves, triangle bass, and hissing noise defined the sonic identity of the 8-bit era.
The OPL2 and OPL3 FM synthesis chips powered PC gaming audio from the late 1980s through the mid-1990s, and their two-operator FM sound — capable of both grating bleeps and surprisingly musical tones — defined a generation of DOS game soundtracks.
The AY-3-8910 was the most widely used sound chip of the 8-bit home computer era, providing three square-wave voices and a noise channel to the ZX Spectrum 128, Amstrad CPC, MSX, and Atari ST, with a bright, buzzy sound as distinctive as any of its contemporaries.
The SN76489 was a simple three-voice PSG with noise that appeared in dozens of consumer products, most notably the Sega Master System and as the secondary sound chip on the Mega Drive, providing its characteristic square-wave chirps and hissing percussion.
The RF5C164 gave the Sega CD eight channels of PCM sample playback from its 512KB audio RAM, enabling the kind of CD-quality instrument samples and digitised audio effects that were impossible on the base Mega Drive hardware.
Hudson Soft's HuC6280 integrated the PC Engine's CPU and a six-channel wavetable synthesiser on a single chip, producing a distinctive sound midway between the NES's synthesis and the SNES's sampling that was used with great skill by Hudson's internal composers.
The YM2151 (OPM) was Yamaha's flagship 4-operator FM chip for arcade hardware through the mid-to-late 1980s, powering the sound hardware of Capcom, Konami, and SNK coin-ops and producing FM music of extraordinary sophistication.
Paula was the Amiga's audio chip, providing four 8-bit PCM channels with hardware DMA playback that sounded like nothing else in home computing in 1985 — composers used it to play back full sampled instruments and tracker music with studio-quality results.
POKEY was Atari's combined audio and I/O chip for the 8-bit home computers, providing four independent voices capable of both pure tone and polynomial counter noise in a chip that also handled keyboard scanning, serial communication, and potentiometer reading.