How to Play Epyx Games Today

You don't need a real C64 to enjoy Impossible Mission, California Games, or Summer Games. Here are the best ways to play Epyx titles in 2026.

Recommended: VICE Emulator

VICE - The Versatile Commodore Emulator

VICE is the gold-standard Commodore 64 emulator for Windows, macOS, and Linux. It emulates the C64 cycle-accurately, including the SID chip, which means Epyx SID music sounds exactly as it did on real hardware. VICE is free, open-source, and updated regularly.

To play Epyx games:

  1. Download VICE from the official site
  2. Download a legal disk image (D64) of your chosen Epyx game from the Internet Archive or an Amiga/C64 preservation site
  3. Open the D64 file in VICE's disk drive emulation
  4. Type LOAD "*",8,1 and press RETURN, or use the auto-start function

VICE also supports the Atari 8-bit (for original Jumpman and early Dunjonquest titles) and the Amiga (for Winter Games, California Games Amiga, and other 16-bit ports) through its sibling emulators.

RetroArch

RetroArch with VICE Core

RetroArch is a multi-system frontend that can run Epyx C64 games using the VICE core. It's particularly useful on Android, iOS, and game consoles (PlayStation, Xbox, Nintendo Switch) where a standalone VICE installation is less practical. The VICE core within RetroArch provides the same accuracy as standalone VICE.

RetroArch also supports the Atari 8-bit through the Atari800 core, enabling play of the original Jumpman, Pitstop II, and early Dunjonquest titles on the platform they were first designed for.

TheC64 Mini / Maxi / MEGA65

Dedicated C64 Hardware

Retro Games Ltd's TheC64 Mini, TheC64 Maxi, and TheC64 Plus are hardware C64 clones that run an embedded VICE emulator. They connect to a modern TV via HDMI and include a USB port for joysticks and game images. TheC64 Maxi includes a full-size keyboard, enabling the original LOAD/RUN experience.

The MEGA65 is a more ambitious project: a modern FPGA-based Commodore 65 prototype computer that is broadly C64-compatible. It runs VICE and can play virtually the entire Epyx C64 catalogue, while also serving as a genuine home computer with its own operating system.

Both options provide an authentic big-screen C64 experience without the maintenance challenges of original hardware.

Browser-Based Emulators

Play in Your Browser - No Installation Required

The Internet Archive hosts browser-playable versions of many Epyx C64 games using an in-browser C64 emulator (based on VICE / Frodo JS). No installation is required - just visit the game's IA page and click "Play in Browser."

Known playable Epyx titles on the Internet Archive include:

Browser emulation is convenient but may have minor audio accuracy differences compared to VICE. For the full SID experience, VICE is recommended.

FPGA Options

FPGA - Cycle-Accurate Hardware Emulation

FPGA (Field-Programmable Gate Array) C64 implementations provide cycle-accurate emulation at the hardware level, not through software. Options include:

  • MiSTer FPGA - the most popular FPGA retro platform, with a C64 core that supports the full Epyx catalogue including accurate SID emulation. Runs on the DE-10 Nano board with various IO boards available.
  • SiDi / Analogue Pocket - portable FPGA options with C64 core support. The Analogue Pocket's Dock enables TV output for a portable-to-big-screen play experience.

For the most accurate reproduction of Epyx's SID music - particularly Chris Grigg's California Games score - a real SID chip or a cycle-accurate FPGA SID implementation is recommended. The SID6581 chip has slight tonal characteristics that software emulation can approximate but not perfectly replicate.

Original Hardware

The Real Thing

Second-hand Commodore 64 hardware is widely available from retro computing markets, eBay, and dedicated communities. A working C64 or C64C with a 1541 disk drive or SD2IEC SD-card reader will play every Epyx C64 title as originally intended.

Communities like Lemon64 and the C64 subreddit can advise on hardware sourcing, recapping (replacing ageing capacitors), and connecting a C64 to modern displays.

The Atari Lynx - Epyx's hardware legacy - is also available second-hand, and California Games was one of its launch titles. Playing California Games on a Lynx is a historically fitting experience.