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{{About|the Commodore Amiga graphics hardware|the oven|Aga cooker}}
'''Amiga Advanced Graphics Architecture''' ('''AGA''') is the third-generation [[Amiga]] graphic chipset, first used in the [[Amiga 4000]] in 1992. Before release AGA was codenamed '''Pandora''' by [[Commodore International]].
AGA was originally called '''AA''' for '''Advanced Architecture''' in the United States. The name was later changed to AGA for the European market to reflect that it largely improved the graphical subsystem, and to avoid trademark issues.<ref>[http://www.amigahistory.co.uk/amigaaga.html The Amiga AGA Chipset
AGA is able to display graphics modes with a depth of up to {{nowrap|8 bit}}s per pixel. This allows for {{nowrap|256 colors}} in indexed display modes and {{nowrap|262,144 colors}} (18-bit) in [[Hold-And-Modify]] (HAM-8) modes. The palette for the AGA chipset has 256 entries from {{nowrap|16,777,216 colors}} (24-bit), whereas previous chipsets, the
AGA
These missed opportunities in the AGA upgrade contributed to the [[Amiga]] ultimately losing technical leadership in the area of [[multimedia]]. After the long-delayed AAA was finally suspended, AGA was to be succeeded by the [[Hombre chipset]], but this was ultimately cancelled due to Commodore's [[bankruptcy]].
AGA is present in the [[Amiga CD32|CD32]], [[Amiga 1200]], and [[Amiga 4000]].
== Technical details ==
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== See also ==
{{Portal|Amiga|1990s}}
* [[Amiga Advanced Architecture chipset]] (AAA chipset)
* [[Amiga Ranger Chipset]]
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