Anyone here revived or built emulated Apple Classic units?
Been looking at things, but it appears its not nearly as popular as the Amiga scene...
I think you are talking about Apple Macintosh Classic? The old
Macintoshes with Black & White Graphics?
https://infinitemac.org/ is a really good online resource, using WASM I think to migrate several classic Macintosh emulators in the browser. I have used this emulator to successfully install System 6, 7, and 8 into
a "hard disk" and export that for use on real 68k and early powerpc apples. Otherwise, emulators are really hard to get going, gathering & configuring ROM's and stuff.
And the "floppyemu" that is useful for Apple ]['s is also compatible
with all of the classic Macintoshes. They're all pretty easy to repair, BlueSCSI makes great hard drive replacements, and I also switch out the models with a fan with a Noctua for complete silence.
Old Macintoshes are dog slow. Especially for games. A few games, like Crystal Quest and Arkanoid provide smooth graphics but those are the exception. Many of the best games are available on other platforms, and they're all better over there -- SimCity, Civilization, Railroad Tycoon. But at least for the Macintosh SE, MacEffects just released a fairly affordable $129 68030 accelerator.
You can also pretty much say the same about powerpc macintoshes, games like Starcraft, Warcraft 1&2, Heroes of Might and Magic 3 and more are available -- but they are also available on other platforms. There are very few unique titles, such as "Marathon" which still have a bit of a following.
Classic Macintoshes were primarily used for word processing and spreadsheets, it was really difficult to develop for at the time and
still are today, in that there is very little for modern cross-compile tools etc. and it was
Contributors of BlueSCSI have recently rallied together to creaet a few great tools for System 6 through 9, https://bluescsi.com/docs/Toolbox so *somebody* is developing for it, I was really elated to see it.
Anyway look hard enough you will find a few small interesting projects,
I just stumbled on this "video player" for classic macs https://www.macflim.com/
But to put a Pi-based emulation of MacOS into a Classic (i.e. compact)
Mac case is easy- there is a new device out that does everything for you: https://jcm-1.com/product/macpicovid-extended/