Interesting stuff about the SHAM and the vertically split ... ie two vertical pixels representing a color, thing... although obviously that would suffer a resolution penalty.
Another technique for a slightly flickery display just came to mind ... I don't know if anyone ever tried this but it would give the illusion of billions of colours....
I don't know exactly how fast screen/palette switching is on graphics cards these days .. I seem to remembering it was more difficult to synchronize such things with the vertical blanking cycle on gfx cards than it was on the old OCS/ECS/AGA chipsets. .. but anyway...
What if you had two versions of an image. One image has color precision rounded down to the nearest available colors, and the other has the color precision rounded up. Then you flip between the two images at 50/60fps so that each image is displayed for 1 frame.
The colors in the one image would seem to combine with the colors in the other image to produce a hybrid color?
For example, taking it to an extreme, black pixels in one image would combine with white pixels in the other to produce a grey?
Of course you wouldn't have to use only black and white. You'd use as many colors in each image as possible. If there was scrolling, both frames would scroll together... even if there is a 50fps refresh this produces the effect of it being a 25fps refresh.
It halves the refresh rate, but the illusion of a third color is produced for every pixel based on the combination of the two colors to the eye. Even if you only had 12-bit color in each image, surely this would give you an illusion of 24-bit color.. if not a lot more? I don't know what the exact formula would be.
I don't even know if the illusion would work but it would sure work BETTER if the refresh rate was high enough ... eg a 100hz refresh would produce a screen at 50hz with flips between screens being one flip per cycle. It would give you a 50hz screen with a whole lotta colors?
I haven't tried it, like I said, to see if the illusion actually holds up and if the flip is fast enough to make the effect, but hey... this just came to me and I don't have an Amiga. Maybe someone can try it and let us know if it works.
Imagine how many colours you could potentially have if you used the 18-bit color palette of AGA and flipped between two slightly differently colored versions of the same image? .... all those hybrid colors.. .36bit color?