Morning all, new poster here,
I'm working on building a fully-functional and automated way to display and play all my retro video game consoles. I don't currently have it built, but it should look something like this picture, with all original hardware and all the consoles routed through analog switch boxes into a single AV upscaler that takes care of the analog-to-digital conversion. So everything you see here would ultimately be output to a couple of HDMI runs, and would be left setup 24/7
I was looking into getting an AVR, and at first I only wanted to add extra HDMI inputs and maybe to power a 2.1 setup. But then I realised that surround sound audio was available in certain video gaming consoles going back to the early 90s, and I thought it would be very cool to try experiences such as original 4.0 Dolby Surround on the Super Nintendo and original PlayStation 1.
I did look into getting an original
1990s Dolby Surround setup with a stereo integrated amplifier hooked up to an original (late 80s/early 90s) Dolby Surround sound processor. But then I was told that if I found a modern receiver that could decode Pro Logic 2, then such a receiver would also be backwards compatible with Pro Logic 1/Dolby Surround. So theoretically I could have my cake and eat it - OG Dolby Surround on the SNES/Playstation 1, Pro Logic 2 on the Playstation 2 and modern Atmos gaming on my PC and Xbox Series X, all through a single AVR (I considered having both an old 80s/90s receiver and a modern Atmos receiver in the same setup, but I thought this would unnecessarily complicate things).
I was talking to Gene recently about Yamaha receivers that can span this 30 year gap, and the Yamaha Aventage range was mentioned, specifically the RX-A2050, RX-A2040, RX-A3050 and RX-A3040. These first generation atmos receivers all can decode Pro Logic 2.
Which brings me to my question - will content mixed with Dolby Surround, Dolby Pro Logic 1 and/or Dolby Pro Logic 2 in mind sound the same when played back through one of these modern receivers? As long as I have my speakers laid out in the correction configuration, should my 1980s Dolby Surround SNES games sound comparable to the same sources when upmixed in a modern receiver (as compared to using an authentic 1980s Dolby Surround receiver)?
Many thanks, appreciate any advice and thoughts