Funny you should mention that, I have a bit of a computer museum in my basement and my OG 486 (which I've posted about on here) that I upgraded with a ODP to a DX4/100 (stock, it's an SX/25) is running Windows 95C and is my DOS vintage gaming unit. I also have a Windows 3.11 486SLC/25 (TI) and a Windows 98SE box (Pentium 233 MMX) and a PII, PIII, P4 as well as a few vintage Macs.
I also have my original 8088 from when I was a kid, but I need to make some repairs to the motherboard. It's running MS-DOS 6.22.
Cool!
However, I don't do any gaming, and I'm not using DOS apps just for vintage fun (although, that would be enough justification!). These DOS apps are my actual working apps.
I need internet, so I'm not doing DOS on metal, but rather creating virtual DOS partitions (using DOSBox-X) on both my Linux and Win10 installs.
I'm emulating MS-DOS 6.22 and running CorelOffice 6.2 for DOS (which is WP6.2 + QP5.6, both for DOS), which was the last (and most mature releases for DOS).
WP 6.2 for DOS has a unique character trait in that it was a highly developed (at least for its day) rich-text word processor that existed when .txt format was still a relevant (and even to some degree still the king of) formats.
By switching to 100% .txt format for all my work, and using WP 6.2 for DOS as a text editor, I get an advantage over using something like Notepad or GEdit in that WP can bring in elements of rich text formatting:
--A nice TUI (with menus, rulers, etc.) that means I don't have to get my (very meager) vim skills up to speed for using CLI Linux word processing tools like MarkDown
--Layout awareness (margins, tabs, hard breaks, etc.)
--Footnotes, endnotes
--Tables
--Macros
--Print previews
But, unlike modern word processors that can also save in .txt format, when WP for DOS saves in .txt, it doesn't introduce any modern codes (verifiable with reveal codes), so you have a pseudo-rich file that's still a true, standard ASCII file that is universally portable (something that was highly necessary for a word processor in 1997).
The elements of rich text that WP can bring make working with plain text much easier (when making
documents in .txt rather than, say,
coding in .txt), but still allow simple, coding-centric text editors to open/edit files with no problem.
As such, I was able to get full syncing of all my documents with my phone, using QuickEdit for Android (which I swear is a long-lost sibling to WP in many ways!) to read or edit those docs on phone or desktop as easily as I previously did with MS Office 365.
True rich text .wpd files (native format for WP for DOS) are also usable (if I want something fancier than the ASCII plaint text files) because WP can save those in postscript form, which is easily converted to pdf for either emailing or direct printing on a modern printer.
So, you see, I'm really using DOS apps for my actual work. Of course, I wouldn't recommend this setup for an actual workplace environment, but for a retired guy with no heavy workflow and no income, there are some big advantages:
1) All these apps are freely available as abandonware, so no cost involved
2) The fact that they are "frozen in amber from 1997" means no worries about upgrades that upset any apple carts
3) Since I only have free cloud storage, I can't have the bulky-ness of modern setups. My entire DOS partition (that runs virtually under DOSBox-X) includes DOS, all the apps, config files, many documents and spreadsheets and the entire thing is---- 55
Mb!
So, while using these things are fun (I used WP + QP full time from 1990-99), it's not just a nostalgia trip for me. These DOS tools are my actual working productivity suite (although, it's the "productivity" of a retired guy!).
Hope you get your 8088 running. I still have my first PC (a Sharp PC-7000, the ultimate portable in 1985!) that was working fine the last time I used it (~1994) but would probably need some cleaning and lubing today.