The US AC adapter plug requires a US SNES adapter. I’m not sure if the European SNES uses the same connector but I can confirm a Super Famicom adapter is a different cable (same one as the Famicom).
Sorry to dig up such an old topic but I saw the replacement shade and shade bracket on ebay and picked up a pair for an extra VB I have that is shadeless. I’m not aware that it is a hyperkin product but if my experience is different than listed above I’ll post pictures.
Squeegor wrote:
Little does the Oculus founder realize his invention will share the same fate as the very thing he criticizes..
I think it’s fate might be that cheaper but similar devices catch on while the innovative rift fades into the annals of history due to being priced out of the market.
Generally but not always cartridge prototypes/reviewables were returned to the publisher. There are a few exceptions to this for example when the publisher went out of business (SNK USA and the Neo-Geo pocket color for example). But usually these were returned and then re-written to another reviewable.
Game Crazy actually was the name of a chain that used to be attached to Hollywood Video stores. I’m curious as to how long this store has been calling itself Game Crazy.
I’ve been out of town recently and just got back and saw this thread. I picked up an Ouya last Summer. It’s mostly used as a media player for me. VLC and movie files off flash drives are a nice combination.
The control is a little delayed. I may bust out the PC Engine version and compare it later on.
Edit: Ehh, I’m wrong. It’s about the same as the PC engine version it’s based on. I think I just remember newer/faster versions of SF II without having tried the original non-turbo version.
This reply was modified 11 years, 2 months ago by DragonmasterDan.