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Magic Computer PC-95 was released in 1995 by Dynacom as an attempt to attract players bored with 8-bit generation. Since 1989, Famicom- and NES-compatible consoles were made and sold in Brazil by local companies, some of which also imported and sold original NES cartridges and consoles.
Famicom Disk System disk drive and RAM adapter attached to the Famicom console. The Family Computer Disk System (Famicom Disk System) has a library of 200 [a] games that have been officially licensed by Nintendo.
The design of the Game Axe was horizontal and similar in appearance to Sega's Game Gear. [1] It had a 3.5-inch (model FC-812) or 4-inch (models FC-816/FC-868) colour LCD screen, [8] two controller ports at the base, an AC jack, and an RCA jack, allowing the Game Axe to be plugged to a television and essentially replace a Famicom.
The Mega Kid MK-1000 is a Famiclone [1] with a built-in Family BASIC compatible keyboard, marketed as an "educational computer".. A Mega Kid MK-1000 Computer type Famiclone. The system comes with two black PlayStation look-alike controllers and a black NES Zapper clone resembling a submachine gun.
The Family Computer Disk System, [a] commonly shortened to the Famicom Disk System, [b] or just Disk System, is a peripheral for Nintendo's Family Computer home video game console, released in Japan on February 21, 1986.
PolyStation is a counterfeit video game console and Famiclone that closely resembles a Sony PlayStation, particularly the PS1 variant. [2] The cartridge slot of the PS1-clone systems is located under the lid which, on an original PlayStation, covers the disc drive.
Pegasus is a Famiclone that was sold in the Czech Republic, [2] Poland, [3] Indonesia, Bosnia-Herzegovina [citation needed] and the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia [citation needed] during the early to mid 1990s.
Seeking to market the Famicom worldwide after its 1983 release in Japan, Nintendo forged a tentative distribution and rights agreement with Atari to market it outside the country as the Nintendo Enhanced Video System; however, both sides never consummated the deal as planned at the Summer CES in June 1983 due to a series of events that culminated in Atari collapsing amid the video game crash ...