Retro game stuff talk
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@mrjordaaany The sale has ended, but in years past it has been on Black Friday.
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Cool!
What are those things? What can you do with those cartridges? -
@flyingtomahawk they’re flash carts. They let you play games from SD cards on real hardware (no emulation). The EverDrives made by Krikzz are widely regarded as some of the best in the world.
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At those prices they must be good otherwise they wouldn't sell well.
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It's so tiny!
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@obsidianspider love it! Excellent grab dude.
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Nice!
Curious, how much did you pay for that Famicom? -
$211 including shipping for everything in the picture. It was from a US seller. The EverDrive alone sells for $118 plus shipping. It included a micro SD card, so that’s worth a few dollars. A bare console sells for $80 all day long and I often see dog bones sell for $30 each on eBay. The three real Famicom games that the seller included weren’t mentioned in the auction but they all work and seem to be authentic.
I did some reading and apparently Japan has 100V AC and with US having ~120V it’s recommended to get an aftermarket power supply or a step down converter, the Famicom works beautifully, but I don’t want to damage it so I will look into another power adapter even thought the authentic Nintendo one seems to work fine.
I noticed that the FDS games don’t all sound correct and apparently that’s because the EverDrive can’t handle the FDS expansion audio properly so I
want to find a cheap FDS RAM adapter and then get a FDStickjust ordered a FDSStick and bought a RAM Adapter from eBay. -
I give @obsidianspider 3 days before he decides to gut the thing and stick a pi in there.
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@lilbud oh heck no. Not this. These aren’t cheap or common like a broken Super Famicom.
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@obsidianspider the only issue i found with using a us psu on these famicoms is the crappy capacitor next to the power jack can blow. Like instantly. But replacing it with another fixes it. Im not sure why the capacitor that comes in them is so crappy. Just so you know, if these are both famicom dogbone controllers the cables are shorter than the us ones. The famicom ones go for around $20-$23 due to the cable.
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@edmaul69 I did notice that these are the "short cable" controllers that are so common in Japan. I may get some extension cables, but for now they work fine.
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@obsidianspider a couple days ago i modded a dogbone to use on a wiimote. you can have the cable if you want it
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@edmaul69 How’d you go about doing that mod? I just took one of my controllers apart and it’s just a plug, not soldered like the old square NES controllers. I didn’t want to mod these, but since it’s just a plug, I’m ok with that. What’s the best way to reach you to exchange info?
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@obsidianspider email is in my profile. I desoldered the pin connector and wired up an nes/snes/n64/gc to wiimote adapter board from raphnet-tech and used a wii nunchuck cable for it. I have done an n64 and nes max controller as well. I had a snes one done but i took the chip out of that and put it in the dogbone controller since im getting a snes classic for christmas. I already have two nes classic controllers. The nes classic controller board is a direct drop in to the old nes and famicom player 1 controllers so i am going to just use one of those on my famicom p1 controller. I need 3 more adapter chips though. 1 for my famicom player 2 and 2 for my atari flashback 1 controllers.
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Very neatly done. I am also a fan of Raphnet’s stuff. Email coming your way.
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Hey guys, not sure if this is off topic but does this look like a good buy for people that are making tabletop arcades:
https://www.gearbest.com/raspberry-pi/pp_664397.html?currency=AUD&vip=985807&gclid=CjwKCAiApo3SBRA4EiwAty8i-qQKMxuBoKo8l29Uz1Zf5j4Jesfgejz1dJ9cSBSbHZTummhvXBuuzRoCWlUQAvD_BwE -
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I just came across this blog post about hunting retro game stuff in Japan. It’s a pretty interesting read. I’m jealous of the author’s ability to visit Japan just to buy gaming stuff.
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