In early 2018, more than a year before the official start of the project, after searching for a subject for the diploma thesis, the idea of building a computer from scratch has come up. Multiple suggestions on how to implement it and the scope of the project were gathered. Originally the goal of the project was to have a computer which would consist of seperate plug-in cards on each of which one instruction would reside. This would debunk the mystery behind the ``black box`` which processors are today. Most processors today are only documented on the execution of their programs and not on their internals. The projects aim was later redirected, due to concerns about the difficulty of the project, to build a processor in VHDL instead. After several months of implementation time the project was split into two parts: the peripherals and the core processor. During the development processes and after rememberingthe original goal to make a processor understandable, the peripherals changed from being implemented in VHDL back to hardware, which came with increased work but would result in a far more understandable final product. The decision for a RISC-V based processor was made at the beginning of the project, because the core architecture is well documented, modular and almost any part not implemented inside the processor(if not specifically required by the software) should be emulateable in software.