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[1] [2] At that time, NEC PC-9801 was the dominant PC architecture in the Japanese PC market because IBM PC/AT and its clone PCs could not display Japanese text. [3] However, NEC did not tolerate PC-9801 compatible machines and was fighting court battles with Epson which was the only PC-9801 compatible machine vendor. Therefore, other vendors ...
It runs upon Namco System 1 hardware, and was inspired by the 1987 Famicom game Family Tennis. In August 1988, the game was ported to the PC Engine console, [2] in which a new tennis-based role-playing quest mode was added, [3] and was later ported to the North American TurboGrafx-16 console by NEC under the title of World Court Tennis in 1989. [2]
•Power League JP: NEC (US) Hudson Soft (JP) June 24, 1988: December 1989 [8] HuCard World Court Tennis •Pro Tennis: World Court JP: NEC (US) Namco (JP) August 11, 1988: December 1989 [8] HuCard World Heroes 2: Hudson Soft: June 4, 1994: Unreleased Arcade CD-ROM² World Jockey: Namco: September 20, 1991: Unreleased HuCard World Sports ...
The NEC APC, the first of the series. The N5200 is a series of personal computers released in 1981. The APC is a version of the N5200 that was sold outside Japan. [4]Although its computer architecture is very similar to the PC-98, it was developed and marketed in a different way.
The TurboGrafx-16, known as the PC Engine [a] outside North America, is a home video game console designed by Hudson Soft and sold by NEC Home Electronics.It was the first console marketed in the fourth generation, commonly known as the 16-bit era, however in actuality, the console has an 8-bit central processing unit (CPU) coupled with a 16-bit graphics processor, effectively making the claim ...
The PC-9800 series [3], commonly shortened to PC-98 or simply 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]
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 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.