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  2. List of Super NES enhancement chips - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Super_NES...

    The list of Super NES enhancement chips demonstrates Nintendo hardware designers' plan to easily expand the Super Nintendo Entertainment System with special coprocessors. This standardized selection of chips was available to licensed developers, to increase system performance and features for each game cartridge.

  3. Nintendo Entertainment System - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nintendo_Entertainment_System

    The NES uses a 72-pin design, as compared with 60 pins on the Famicom. To reduce costs and inventory, some early games released in North America are simply Famicom cartridges attached to an adapter to fit inside the NES hardware. [153] Early NES cartridges are held together with five small slotted screws. Games released after 1987 were ...

  4. Ricoh 2A03 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ricoh_2A03

    PAL versions of the NES (sold in Europe, Asia, and Australia) use the Ricoh 2A07 or RP2A07 processor, which is a 2A03 with modifications to better suit the 50 Hz vertical refresh rate used in the PAL television standard. However, most developers lacked the resources to properly adjust their games' music from NTSC to PAL, leading to many PAL ...

  5. Physics processing unit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Physics_processing_unit

    A physics processing unit (PPU) is a dedicated microprocessor designed to handle the calculations of physics, especially in the physics engine of video games. It is an example of hardware acceleration .

  6. Super Nintendo Entertainment System - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Super_Nintendo...

    The Super NES was released in the United Kingdom and Ireland in April 1992 for £150 (equivalent to £390 in 2023). [37] Most of the PAL region versions of the console use the Japanese Super Famicom design, except for labeling and the length of the joypad leads. The Playtronic Super NES in Brazil, although PAL-M, uses the North American design ...

  7. Nintendo Entertainment System models - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nintendo_Entertainment...

    The Sharp Nintendo Television, often described as the C1 NES TV, is a CRT television with a built-in Famicom/NES that was produced by Sharp under license from Nintendo. It was originally released in Japan in October 1983 as the My Computer TV ; [ h ] [ 54 ] it was also distributed in Taiwan via Sampo as the Sampo C1 starting in 1984. [ 55 ]

  8. List of video game console palettes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_video_game_console...

    The Picture Processing Unit (PPU) used in the Nintendo Entertainment System generates color based on a composite video palette. [5] The 54-colors can be created based on four luma values, twelve combinations of I and Q chroma signals and two series of I = Q = 0 for several pure grays. There are two identical whites, one of the blacks has less ...

  9. CIC (Nintendo) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CIC_(Nintendo)

    The Checking Integrated Circuit (CIC) is a lockout chip designed by Nintendo for the Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) video game console in 1985; the chip is part of a system known as 10NES, in which a key (which is stored in the game) is used by the lock (stored in the console) to both check if the game is authentic, and if the game is the ...