I see Camera. I had reserved 65 euro long time ago for FlashBoy, when the price first appeared in the FlashBoy review (it suddenly appeared one day in the right column). Now that the definite price was finally 75 euro, I gathered 10 more euro for it 😉 I think it’s a great addition to any Virtual Boy collection. :thumpup::-D
Neo Geo Pocket Color + commercial games + Neo Geo Pocket Linker
GamePark 32 + 15 commercial games
Game Boy Color + Games + Game Boy Linker
Game Boy Advance SP
Game Boy Advance Afterburner Edition (lit screen)
N-Gage (x2)
N-Gage QD
Wii + games
Nintendo 64 + many games
PSP + games
Nintendo DS Lite + games
I’m sure I might have something more, I just can’t remember. I also sold many games+consoles one year ago.
I play Wii a lot (when I have free time, that is). I think it’s the ideal “party console”, opposed to the “play alone” PS3 & XBox360. Of course, you can play multiplayer in all of them, but by “party console” I speak of mini-games which give a lot of fun for 30-minute plays. Of course, if you compare the same game in XBox 260, PS3 and Wii, the first two versions will probably be much better than the Wii version. Now I’m hooked up to Rayman Raving Rabbids 2 and Metal Slug Compilation.
The patches are for the ROMs, not the emulator. See it this way: you have a game that runs under Windows and you download a translation patch for that game. That patch modifies the game, not Windows. In this example, Windows = emulator and game = ROM, so the patches are for the ROM.
As for the translations, I am looking forward to play Space Squash in English, which somebody (I can’t remember the user now, sorry) has translated to English recently. I would also like to know how to play SD Gundam. I know it’s crappy, but I’d like to know how to play it :P.
Your explanation is enough, but I’ll add mine just in case 😉 I loved computers and also loved putting them all together to get them working. Installing operating systems, getting them into home networks, configuring them, etc. Then I began working as an IT expert (sort of), managing four small networks. It was fun at the beginning, but then the networks grew and I had to choose. I finally decided to stay with one of them, which in two years time grew up to 200 computers scattered all around the country in five different offices. Then I began hating computers, more and more as days passed, and I finally chose to turn my career to a different direction, forgetting all about computers (professionally speaking).
Now, I only maintain my computers, and I’ve let aside everything related to computers. Since computers was a hobby which I loved, and turned out a job which I hated, I thought I’d leave videogames as a hobby which I love, so that it stays that way 🙂
Thanks, it took a lot of work to get it like that, since I didn’t use stickers, but Premium Photo Paper for LaserJet which I then cut and stuck using a glue similar to Pritt bars, but a bit more sticky.
As for what I know from Chris and the stickers you will use on the box, it should look even better, since from what I understood from Chris, the sticker for the box is not made of four parts as mine (front, back with sleeves, and two sides with the sleeves), but of a single sticker which should “wrap” around the box. If this info is right, it should hide the borders of the box. In my Blox box they are not hidden, but since I used a Vertical Force box and the labels I made are also black, they go unnoticed 🙂