Top Stories from Years of 'Popular Mechanics'. Every Single Aircraft Carrier in the World. This content is imported from YouTube. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site. This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported onto this page to help users provide their email addresses.
You may be able to find more information about this and similar content at piano. Advertisement - Continue Reading Below. Given what Nintendo had to work with, they did pretty well. Nintendo did similar add-ins for Gameboy compatibility, and Atari eventually produced a similar module to try to save its ill-fated console. Nintendo would have had to develop a discrete sound chip that would be compatible, or get someone else to develop it, in order to make the module feasible.
Nintendo executives probably figured anyone who wanted to play NES games would just hang on to their old NES console and play their old games on it. You could connect one to the composite inputs and one to the RF inputs and even have both consoles connected to the same TV.
You can still do that today. Like similar adapters for other systems, it contains NES-compatible hardware inside the cartridge. If not, how does the FC Twin work? These can work one of two ways. Any retro 8- or bit system can easily be reimplemented today on a single chip, known as a system-on-a-chip, or SoC. These SoCs are fairly inexpensive today. A designer can simply place two or more SoCs on a motherboard, hook them up to compatible cartridge slots, and essentially cram multiple consoles onto a single circuit board that fits in an enclosure no larger than any one of the original consoles was.
A second option is to simply put a powerful enough CPU in the console to emulate the older console. Simply load emulator software onto it, place compatible cartridge ports on the board, and go to town. The Retron 5 is a console that takes the emulation approach. MisterNoGood 7 years ago 3.
There is an adapter you could try. They also sell an adapter to play Genesis games on the Snes. I dont know how well these work. I never tried them. Simon 7 years ago 4. EgoKiller 7 years ago 5. Fell apart within a few months. No, but the system was originally planned to be backwards compatible, iirc. My friend got an adaptor for it on the super Nintendo. I think it might be from the same company that does the retro duo. It works alright I suppose, its about as good as the clone systems do anyway.
ZoqFotPik 7 years ago 9. MisterNoGood posted Although the Super8 also uses the SNES for video I think unlike the other adapters, the Super-8 didn't have a video-out on the adapter.
0コメント