TT10 Demoscene

Demoscene competition!

The home computer demoscene has resulted in some amazing feats of hacking and pushing hardware to its limits.

The Tiny Tapeout demoscene competition sticks to the same audio/visual output format, but instead of using an existing computer, you create your own ASIC hardware!

All entrants will receive 1 free tile for their design.

All entrants who also purchase the demoboard will get a free VGA and Audio PMOD expansion module!

What are the rules?

Categories

  • Newcomer - TT10 must be your first tapeout on Tiny Tapeout,
  • Best sound track,
  • Best single tile design,
  • Best graphics,
  • Most impressive for the size,
  • Rulebreaker - example using more than 2 tiles, using RP2040 for something. be aware that judges must be able to test your design with no additional hardware,
  • Mixed signal - uses some analog in the design,
  • Game - TBD standardise on the controller,
  • Secret category announced 1 week before the deadline!

How to enter

  • Once your design is passing the GitHub actions, submit it to the competition form before the closing date.
  • Once submitted to the form, we will send you a coupon within 48 hours for a free tile on TT10.
  • You then use to coupon to submit your design to the shuttle at app.tinytapeout.com.

How to get help

Prizes

prizes

  • All entrants who purchase the demoboard will get free VGA, audio PMODs and a sticker pack.
  • Winners of each category will receive combinations of:
    • Matt’s first ASIC die mounted in an epoxy cube, numbered and signed,
    • ASIC baseball caps,
    • Free tiles for future tapeouts,
    • Silicon wafers,
    • Previous TT chips.

Judges

TBD!

Small print

  1. How will the competition be judged? A panel of appointed judges will vote and have the final say. The submissions will be judged on the results the judge gets on their boards.
  2. Will there be any extension to the deadline? No!
  3. You can change the documentation used by the judges up to the point of judging the design. Any changes must be submitted to the chip datasheet by pull request to the GitHub repository.
  4. When will the competition be judged? 2 weeks after 75% of the boards have been received by entrants (estimated December 2025).
  5. Your design must not depend on any other hardware.
  6. You are not limited to a maximum clock frequency, but if the judges can’t get the design to work (because their ASIC is slower for example) then you run the risk of not qualifying. You are advised to use ~80MHz or less.
  7. You are advised to stick with a standard VGA timing, if it doesn’t work on the judge’s display you run the risk of not qualifying.