What’s the N64 controller port for?
Dumping memory cards is my guess
Ah, right, you wouldn’t have the same for PSX and Saturn because it can’t dump the games anyhow
Yep!
I, uh, had a 32" Odyssey G7 fall into my hands
32 inches might be my sane limit for “I am sitting directly in front of this animated light source”
240hz is nice
my desk, already short on room, has less room now
I’m not sure if this is a blessing or a curse
Yum yum
Bung Pocket Linker (NGPC/PC)
Cart dumper/flasher for the NeoGeo Pocket Color (and NeoGeo Pocket?). Too bad about the parallel port requirement! I wonder if there’s any chance it would work via a USB-Parallel adapter.
A couple Pocket Linker auctions, kinda spendy ($139.99 and $175) and they don’t vouch for whether they’re still functional or not:
There are various software downloads out there for it apparently (heck maybe the floppy in that second auction would be the score), no idea how tricky they may be to use on current systems even if the hardware end could be sorted out.
This is exactly what my GBA flashcart setup looked like. I think it took like 20 minutes to flash a game or something like that?
I dumped my first GBA cart (Double Dragon Advance) with the Sanni yesterday : ), it did take a surprising amount of time compared to SNES, maybe a minute or so.
I remember seeing these on Lik-sang back in the day! I wanted my parents to get me these kinds of flashers so I could write homebrew as a kid but they thought I wasn’t smart enough to actually do it
https://www.reddit.com/r/crtgaming/comments/12yk96d/hitachi_21_inch_crt_tv_with_a_builtin/
God bless.
This bring me back the days, fridge made by our local factory always has a super big radiator on the back, my father always like to flex his Japanese SHARP fridge has a clean surface without any outside radiator. This one must be the same technology.
moving all those giant CRTs… my back woulda been fuuuuucked.
Were you the one that was making custom cases for soundtrack cassettes years ago on here? Those were so cool!
no but that sounds sick
environmental storytelling