No it doesn't it gets a directdraw error.
only in compatability mode
No - after Windows 98 came Windows Me & Windows 2000 - then Windows 7.
Windows 7 requires more RAM and processing power than Windows 98 computers because of its enhanced UI and the amount of background services it runs to make your computer work and function properly. It might possibly run the lightest version of Windows 7, called Windows 7 Starter.
Windows 7 and windows 98 are both operating systems. What matters is the hardware platform. To answer the question, probably not. Most hardware platforms made in the days of windows 98 will not be sufficient for the needs of the windows 7 operating system.
It should do. I have a copy of Doom II on this computer (Windows 7) - Doom II is an OLD computer game (from around 1994 !) - written long before Windows 7 operating system was written.
Nothing. If it works at all, it will tell you it can't upgrade from Windows 98.
USB is supported by Windows 95B and 95C, Windows 98, Windows 98 SE, Windows 2000, Windows ME, Windows XP, Windows Vista, and windows 7
windows 95 windows 98 windows XP windows NT windows ME windows vista windows 7
It depends on your OS. If you have Windows 98 or older, chances are it won't work. If you own a Mac, chances are it won't work. If it's Windows 7, it might have a glitch (I have RCT3 on 7 and the screen size was altered).
windows 95 windows 98 windows ntwindows mewindows xpwindows vistawindows 7
Windows 98 Second Addition ran on a number of different motherboards. The main thing was if the motherboard had drivers that would work under Windows 98. In some cases, Windows 95 or Windows ME drivers would be satisfactory substitutions. The main types of boards that supported Windows 98 SE were either Socket 7 (Intel Pentium and AMD K6, K6/2, K6/3) or Socket A (AMD Duron and Athlon).
as its new, it will work for windows 7