GameBoy Advance 'Time Machine' NES Adapter Trailed 51
Thanks to Lik-Sang for their report on a third-party 'Time Machine' NES adapter for the GameBoy Advance SP, being developed by a Taiwanese manufacturer and trailed at the Hong Kong Electronics Fair. According to Lik-Sang, who are also showing a promo picture of the device: "The product is supposed to be market-ready within the next couple of weeks, and the primary use is to play your Famicom/NES cartridges on your GBA through the unit. Famicom cartridges are plugged in at the back of the unit, while the system sits underneath the GBA SP."
awesome! (Score:3, Funny)
Sounds great!
NES and Famicom cartridges are not the same (Score:1)
The article is not clear, however it stands to reason that this adapter may only work with Famicom cartridges and not with the clumsier NES cartridges.
Re:NES and Famicom cartridges are not the same (Score:2)
ROM shortage was all about price (Score:1)
Thats when I knew Nintendo lied to us about saying the amount of ROM space was the main culpret behind not having bigger games.
The NES has had bankswitching [everything2.com] since the CNROM [everything2.com] days. The limiting factor during the "ROM shortage" was the cost of replicating mask ROMs with larger capacity; at the time, Nintendo didn't want to price Game Paks at 80 USD MSRP. Cost was also the issue in Square's decision to publish Final Fantasy VII for a CD-based system instead of the Nintendo 64; what Square wanted to do with
Re:NES and Famicom cartridges are not the same (Score:2)
I have one I got in Hong Kong a long time ago. It says "HoneyBee" on it and works well.
Re: Famicom/NES cartridge adapter (Score:1)
I recommend F2A (Score:1)
Correct. IAAGBASD[1], and the Flash2Advance carts are currently the way to go for almost anything you'd want to use a flash cart for.
[1] I am a Game Boy Advance software developer [pineight.com].
A solution looking for a problem? (Score:3, Interesting)
Straight ports are the way to go, although many of my favorite games probably will never see play on a GBA simply because they're too old and weren't released by Nintendo, who seems to be one of the few (if not the only) developers to release their classic games on the handheld.
Re:A solution looking for a problem? (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:A solution looking for a problem? (Score:1)
Also, the TV de Advance was for connecting your GBA to a TV, the precursor to the GB Player. You're thinking of the AV input carts for GBA that probably also scale.
Re:A solution looking for a problem? (Score:2, Informative)
I'm amazed at how many add-ons there are for the GBA.
Re:A solution looking for a problem? (Score:2)
Re:A solution looking for a problem? (Score:1)
Hopefully. . . (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Hopefully. . . (Score:1)
why not (Score:1)
Re:why not (Score:2)
Whenever a neat, legal alternative to ROM's come around, there always has to be one post that talks about "Why not just do it the illegal way?
To answer this post and all the ones that will follow in future threads:
Because some of us like to obey the law.
PocketNES doesn't slow down in scaled mode (Score:1)
Inherent resolution problems create no problem. PocketNES runs 60fps whether in scaled mode (240x160 window on the NES's 256x240 pixel display) or unscaled mode (a fixed 240x213 window of the NES display, shrunk down to 240x160 with GBA hardware assistance).
Re:PocketNES doesn't slow down in scaled mode (Score:1)
i guess the gba must have some amount of hardware scaling
To put it in simple terms, it's possible to change what address the GBA's screen starts from after each scanline. This is what PocketNES uses.
Re:why not (Score:2)
What, exactly, is illegal about me dumping the ROM's from my old NES games, putting them all on a flash card with an emulator/menu program, and playing them on the GBA hardware (which I purchased legally)? Or did I miss the story about the overturning of Fair Use while I was on vacation?
Re:why not (Score:2)
That would be perfectly legal. However, the majority of posts that talk about ROM downloading are talking about downloading ROM's you do not own. Or even downloading a ROM of a game you do own, which is still illegal. You have to rip it off yourself.
The original post only spoke of the flashing of the ROM onto a GBA flash cartridge. Since there was no mention of how the original ROM was picked up, I'm assuming they meant downloading it as 95% of the ROM's our there are obtained.
Re:why not (Score:1)
Re:why not (Score:1)
Yay! (Score:1)
My Question (Score:2)