According to an article published in
Sinclair User magazine, Loki was to have a 7 MHz
Z80H CPU, a minimum of 128
KiB of
RAM and two custom chips providing much enhanced video and audio capabilities The video chip, referred to as the
Rasterop chip, would have
blitter-type functionality and three different modes: 512×256 pixels with 16 colours, 256×212 with 256 colours, or 256×212 with 64 colours and two bits per pixel used for "blitter objects". Comprehensive peripheral support was also claimed, including
MIDI,
lightpen, joystick and
floppy disk. A version of the
SuperBASIC language from the
Sinclair QL was to be provided in place of the old
Sinclair BASIC for the
ZX Spectrum and support for the
CP/M operating system was also intended. On top of this, the computer would cost as little as £200. Another Spectrum magazine,
Crash, poured scorn on the report in
Sinclair User, dismissing the design as "
dreamware" in the opinion of an ex-Sinclair designer they consulted, analysing the implied components and costs, and adding, "It may be fun to dream about Loki, but the fact is that it won't appear, and nor will anything like it." This was the rationale, according to Crash Technical Editor Simon Goodwin: == History ==