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The Japanese NEC Corporation produced several personal computers, including the NEC PC-6001, NEC PC-8801 and NEC PC-9801. Subcategories This category has the following 7 subcategories, out of 7 total.
This list of games for the TurboGrafx-16, known as the PC Engine outside North America, covers 678 commercial releases spanning the system's launch on October 10, 1987, until June 3, 1999. It is a home video game console created by NEC , released in Japan as the PC Engine in 1987 and North America as the TurboGrafx-16 in 1989.
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NEC: Run Run Kyōsōkyoku: October 1989: ELF Corporation: ELF Corporation Salad no Kuni no Tomato-hime: July 1984: Hudson Soft: Hudson Soft Sammy Lightfoot: June 1985: Sierra On-Line: Comptiq: The Scheme: August 1988: Bothtec: Bothtec Schwarzschild II: Teikoku no Haishin: December 1989: Kogado Studio: Kogado Studio The Screamer: May 25, 1985 ...
The PC-8801's direct successor, the PC-8801mkII, came with a JIS level 1 kanji font ROM, a smaller case and keyboard, and, in the models 20 and 30, one or two internal 5 1 ⁄ 4-inch 2D floppy disk drives. This set of PC-8800 computers sold more units than the PC-9800 series at that time.
The MobilePro 400 was released in 1997. It had 4 MB of RAM and a NEC VR4101 MIPS processor. It came with Windows CE 1.0 but could be upgraded to Windows CE 2.0. The MobilePro 400 has Pocket Word, Excel and PowerPoint. Like the MobilePro 200 before it, it runs on two AA batteries which last about a month.
The PC-FX [a] is a 32-bit home video game console co-developed by NEC and Hudson Soft. Released in December 1994, it is based on the NEC V810 CPU and CD-ROM, and was intended as the successor to the PC Engine (known overseas as the TurboGrafx-16). Unlike its predecessor, the PC-FX was only released in Japan.
The PC-9800 series [3], commonly shortened to PC-98 or 98 (キューハチ, Kyū-hachi), [4] is a lineup of Japanese 16-bit and 32-bit personal computers manufactured by NEC from 1982 to 2003. [1]