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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:
- Download VICE from the official site
- Download a legal disk image (D64) of your chosen Epyx game from the Internet Archive or an Amiga/C64 preservation site
- Open the D64 file in VICE's disk drive emulation
- 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:
- Summer Games - IA: summer_games
- Impossible Mission - IA: impossible_mission_202309
- California Games - IA: California_Games_1987_Epyx
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.
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:
- Download VICE from the official site
- Download a legal disk image (D64) of your chosen Epyx game from the Internet Archive or an Amiga/C64 preservation site
- Open the D64 file in VICE's disk drive emulation
- Type
LOAD "*",8,1and 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 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.
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.
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:
- Summer Games - IA: summer_games
- Impossible Mission - IA: impossible_mission_202309
- California Games - IA: California_Games_1987_Epyx
Browser emulation is convenient but may have minor audio accuracy differences compared to VICE. For the full SID experience, VICE is recommended.
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.
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.