Postby Serum » Thu Jun 19, 2014 11:56 pm
Well, it came in the mail, today! I gotta say, it's pretty neat, so far! I updated the firmware on it and it seems to be running everything just fine. To answer Redstar's question regarding the "HD" I don't know if I'd call it "HD" but it definitely presents games from far older systems in a higher rez than you'd get from the actual system they were designed for-- the colors appear much more vividly and the image is crisper depending on the setting you have it on. I keep mine on "HQ2X," which I think means "High Quality Times Two," though I may be wrong.
No trouble saving anything, you can save the traditional way to the cartridge or use a flash save, the system has a built in 1.2GB of memory to save and I have an 8GB SDHC card in it that I'm also using to store updates in. I have yet to utilize the built-in GameGenie which you need to download the cheats for onto the SD card (I think) but I don't usually cheat on older console games unless it's unusually difficult. One thing I found really cool is that the GUI menu identifies the game you insert into the the slots before you load it, so I popped in "Phantasy Star IV" on the Sega and it automatically said the name of the game!
So far the games I've tested are...
Sega Genesis...
The Lawnmower Man
Beavis & Butt-Head
Shadowrun
Battletoads Meet Double Dragon
Phantasy Star II: The End of the Lost Age
Phanty Star III: Generations of Doom
Phantasy Star IV: The End of the Millennium
Super Nintendo...
Shadowrun
Wolfenstein 3-D
GameBoy Advance...
Harvest Moon: Friends of Mineral Town
...everything is fine, working more than nominally and I think it's pretty awesome, so far, like I said, I haven't had any problems. I gotta say this was worth the wait! And UE5K, to answer your question about why not just use ROMs with an XBOX360 controller-- there's a very fine line between ROM-gaming and real retro gaming and this machine is a sort of nice bridge between the gap-- let's face it, many SNESs and Genesises and NESs especially don't work anymore and the cartridges age a lot better than one might expect if they're taken care of, so why not use them if you can get a machine that runs them?
Oh, one more note-- the system really "hugs" the cartridges, there's no 'eject' button the way there might be on an older NES (non top-loading models) but if you gram the cartridge by the corner and pull it's not so hard to remove. But they are in pretty tight, which concerned me at first but again, after some testing it seems to be fine. I've heard some people complain that the tightness scratched their games internally but I've not had that issue at all.
What would you do without your big brother?
I'd like to give it a shot and find out.