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horchata posted:How difficult is it to RGB mod a SNES mini without prior soldering experience? Also, probably a stupid question, but do framemeisters ever go on sale or am I stuck paying 340~ for one? It's pretty tricky since the video encoder chip is surface mount, and probably not something I'd suggest doing if you've never soldered before.
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# ? Aug 5, 2016 01:00 |
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# ? May 13, 2024 10:39 |
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I just lopped off a side of my Phantasy Star IV box and stuck it in to a clamshell when I got (early 2000s?). I'd probably still do that now.
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# ? Aug 5, 2016 01:02 |
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There are definitely some Genesis games that are just crazily expensive compared to the rest of the library (Phantasy Star IV, Castlevania: Bloodlines, Splatterhouse 2 and 3, Gunstar Heroes, and Shining Force II spring to mind), but even then, it's nothing compared to how expensive the SNES heavy hitters have gotten. There are still tons of really good Genesis games in the $10-15 range at least, though I don't follow the market at all so I have no idea if it will stay that way.
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# ? Aug 5, 2016 01:07 |
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horchata posted:How difficult is it to RGB mod a SNES mini without prior soldering experience? Also, probably a stupid question, but do framemeisters ever go on sale or am I stuck paying 340~ for one? Instant Sunrise is probably right about it being difficult. If you don't have soldering experience (or a soldering iron, for that matter), check out Monitor Burn's modding service thread in SA-Mart if you want to get it modded. As for the XRGB, I don't think it ever really goes on sale. A big price factor is the exchange rate of the Japanese yen to the US dollar (or whatever currenct); the dollar ranges in value from 100 to 120 yen, so when the exchange rate is in the dollar's favor ($1:120 yen), you're essentially looking at a ~20% price reduction. When it's not, which is the current case, then you're paying a lot more.
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# ? Aug 5, 2016 01:21 |
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The Gaijin Gamer's Guide to Japanese (to guide you through the mountain of import games) Modifying my curriculum a little. Memorizing all the commands in Zork is ridiculous for beginners so instead I'll be focusing on directions which is far more important. Plus there's actually a Japanese version of Zork 1 on PlayStation, that's news to me. Part 1: Kana Part 2: Kanji Here it is, the roadblock to every aspiring linguist. Where the kana can be learned in a weekend, kanji will take years. Some 2,000+ is expected after high school and that doesn't include the special readings exclusively used for names. Kanji have multiple meanings based on their usage or context. They have a traditional Chinese meaning, which could be something different when used as a verb or noun, and mean something else when compounded with other kanji. For example 表 is the kanji for "exterior/surface" but when used as a verb in 表す it means "to represent/express". Kanji have sound readings (onyomi) based on Chinese and their Japanese phonetic readings (kunyomi). Usually compound words and nouns use onyomi readings and adjectives and verbs use kunyomi but many exceptions exist. For example 物 means "thing" and uses the kunyomi reading もの (mono). But 生物 means "living thing" and uses the onyomi ぶつ (butsu). Here's a fun example of how complex kanji can get. Brightness and bright share the same kanji 明 but the noun is pronounced めい (mei) and the adjective あか (aka). Nouns by themselves usually use onyomi while adjectives use the kunyomi reading although this isn't always true either because as mentioned above the noun for "thing" is kunyomi. 日 "day" is usually にち (nichi), but 明日 "tomorrow" is あした (ashita). 星 star's onyomi is normally セイ (sei) but sometimes ショウ (shou), but how come 明星 Venus ends up みょうじょう (myoujyou)? This is called rendaku and it's the devil. I guess myoushou results in a lot of tongue twisters so people started voicing their consonants. You'll see rendaku often as is the case with 人々 "everybody." It's ひとびと (hitobito) and not ひとひと (hitohito). How Can I Make Kanji Work For Me? You're not going to learn kanji overnight but we can at least memorize the most common stuff. Although Japanese has its fair share of synonyms you're going to see some vocabulary more than others because it's easy for everyone to recognize instantly. For example 別れる and 分かれる both mean "to separate" and are pronounced exactly the same. But 99% of the time you'll only see 分 used in the context of the verb "to understand" 分かる (wakaru) instead. But that kanji is also used for minute because the Chinese meaning is "part." I apologize in advance. Because Japanese is a "sound poor" language this leads to all the punny jokes you've probably seen. Hey, here's a good one! An American woman asks a Japanese man for directions. She replies "thank you" in her best accent サンキュー (sankyuu). The man exclaims "I didn't know you were pregnant!" Get it? Because "thank you" in English sounds like "maternity leave" in Japanese さんきゅう (sankyuu). Huh? Anybody?? りーん りーん ...continuing on Beginner: Directions I'm going to put the romaji in spoilers. Try your best to read the hiragana. Let's start off easy with cardinal directions. They use the kunyomi readings. 北 きた kita - north 東 ひがし higashi - east 南 みなみ minami - south 西 にし nishi - west Intercardinal directions are a little more difficult because they use onyomi instead of the kunyomi. Compound words (more than one kanji) usually use onyomi. 北東 ほくとう hokutou - northeast 南東 なんとう (nantou) - southeast 南西 なんせい (nansei) - southwest 北西 ほくせい (hokusei) - northwest Since adventure games require moving up and down let's look at those as well. 上 うえ ue - above/up 下 した shita - below/down What direction am I facing? Don't cheat! Practice: Copy and paste the kanji from above to answer these. Read them out loud as you do it. What are the directions to get through the Lost Woods in the first Legend of Zelda? 北 西 南 西 Referencing this map of Zork, what's the fastest way from the round room to the Egyptian room? 南東 東 下 南 東 Intermediate: Learning Your Verbs Through SCUMM Verbs are kanji with a hiragana ender which means they'll largely use kunyomi readings. Verbs are classified as either -ru verbs or -u verbs based on the sound they make. You don't need to know more than that until you start conjugating sentences. For now remember: if a word ends in an "u" sound then it's likely a verb. Maniac Mansion is a perfect place to dive into verbs. You'll see this vocabulary in almost every Japanese adventure game (although NES will tend to use hiragana so you'll have to memorize the kanji on your own, sorry). To start off easy, why don't we look at the Japanese version of Maniac Mansion on Famicom? From left to right, top to bottom: 開ける あける akeru - to unlock/open 押す おす osu - to push 仲間 なかま nakama - Colleague. Used to change characters 行く いく iku - to move 閉める しめる shimeru - to shut/close 引く ひく hiku - to pull 使う つかう tsukau - to use 読む よむ yomu - to read 渡す わたす watasu - to give 取る とる toru - to take 点ける つける tsukeru - to switch on 消す けす kesu - to turn off power Practice: Boot up the Japanese Maniac Mansion in an emulator or something and play it! Use the above list as reference and say out loud the verbs as you select them. Use an English FAQ to help solve a puzzle or two by referencing the Japanese verbs with the English verbs. For a real challenge beat the game. It's maybe an hour with a guide. Advanced: Counting, Time, and Dates The calendar format for dates is "day: month: year" while the full international (e.g. newspaper) format is "year: month: day: time [sometimes Gregorian day]." The numbers are almost always written in Arabic numerals but we should still learn how to pronounce the numbers in Japanese. Let's start with the basics of counting the days on a calendar, 1-31. 一 いち ichi - one 二 に ni - two 三 さん san - three 四 し/よん shi or yon - four 五 ご go - five 六 ろく roku - six 七 しち/なな shichi or nana - seven 八 はち hachi - eight 九 きゅう/く kyuu or ku - nine 十 じゅう jyuu - ten 4 and 7 have huge exceptions because shi sounds like "death" and shichi "certain death." Generally speaking, anything beyond ten uses yon and nana instead of shi and shichi. Nine can also be pronounced ku and this seems to be a dialect thing. Kyuu is the most common with few exceptions. Going higher than ten involves combining a number in the ones place with the tens place. So 20 is にじゅう (nijyuu) and thirty one is さんじゅういち (sanjyuuichi). The kanji for dates and their onyomi 日 にち nichi - day of the month 月 げつ getsu - month 年 ねん nen - year However, when counting the months of the year it's pronounced がつ (gatsu). If somebody asks you what month is August you would say はちがつ (hachigatsu, 8th month) and not hachigetsu. Annoyingly, counting days changes the readings. Day becomes か (ka) and the numbers precede it. You should know the kanji by now so let's focus on the readings. ついたち (tsuitachi) first day ふつか futsuka second day みっか mitsuka third day よっか yokka fourth day いつか itsuka fifth day むいか muika sixth day ようか youka seventh day なのか nanoka eighth day ここのか kokonoka ninth day とおか tooka tenth day Once you get into the teens it goes back to onyomi readings. For example 13th day jyuusannichi. Howeveeeeeeer we have a boatload of exceptions because language hates you. Remember that people don't like saying shi for four so the number four retains it's kunyomi. E.g. the twenty-fourth day will be nijyuuyokka. Seven oddly becomes shichi so seventeenth-day is jyuushichinichi. Nine becomes ku when counting days so twenty-ninth day is nijyuukunichi. Moving on to Gregorian days. 曜日 ようび (youbi) means "day of the week." The kanji for day uses kunyomi but because of our good friend rendaku you voice the consonant. The seven kanji have a unique meaning and you should memorize them because they're very common. If you want to be formal you can add 曜日 but just the onyomi can suffice as an abbreviation if people understand your context. You'll see the abbreviation in calendars and planners but not newspapers. 月 げつ getsu - Monday (moon) 火 か ka - Tuesday (fire) 水 すい sui - Wednesday (water) 木 もく moku - Thursday (tree) 金 きん kin - Friday (gold) 土 ど do - Saturday (earth) 日 にち nichi - Sunday (sun) Finally, let's count time. 時 じ ji - Hour counter. o'clock. 分 ふん fun - Minute counter. Get ready for more exceptions! The 4th hour is shortened to yoji. 7 and 9 use their alternate reading. For minutes you use the full alternate reading for 4, 7, and 9. 1, 3, 4, 6, 8, and 10 get handakuten'd where the fun becomes pun e.g. yonpun is 4 minutes. Furthermore 1, 6, 8, and 10 get shortened to double consonants. E.g. 1 minute is ippun, not ichipun. Whew, that's a lot of stuff. Romaji is common with dates, probably because news is read by a wide variety of people. But you should still know what the kanji mean because they crop up often. What day is it in this screenshot? Practice: Transliterate today's full date including the time (abbreviate the year since I didn't teach you thousands). What's your favorite day of the week and your least favorite? As of this writing it's yokka hachigatsu jyuurokunen. The time is shichiji jyuuyonpun. I love kinyoubi and hate getsuyoubi! In Part 3 we're diving into the deep end. Learn how to reference and look up Japanese you don't know using dictionaries. Use character recognition programs to cut and paste Japanese text from screenshots. Find out how to translate things you don't know really quickly! Further Reading Numbers and Counting
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# ? Aug 5, 2016 01:32 |
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Is there a decent consensus about which model of Genesis sounds the best or is it a subjective "the Genesis model I had as a kid is the best sounding one?" Or did I just open a can of worms by even asking this?
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# ? Aug 5, 2016 02:04 |
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Instant Sunrise posted:Is there a decent consensus about which model of Genesis sounds the best or is it a subjective "the Genesis model I had as a kid is the best sounding one?" Check out these "Streets Of Rage 2" sound comparisons, see which one speaks to you: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tiu8wDLV_9g EDIT: Also, Sonic 3: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jjCOlnGpi1g I've never been a fan of the second model consoles, because they feel cheap as hell and like Sega was cutting corners (which makes sense, since they came out near the end of the Genesis' life cycle). I'd just look for a Model 1 with the "High Definition Graphics" logo and call it good, if only because it was probably what a lot of developers were working with. Kthulhu5000 fucked around with this message at 02:14 on Aug 5, 2016 |
# ? Aug 5, 2016 02:12 |
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Grizzled Patriarch posted:There are definitely some Genesis games that are just crazily expensive compared to the rest of the library (Phantasy Star IV, Castlevania: Bloodlines, Splatterhouse 2 and 3, Gunstar Heroes, and Shining Force II spring to mind), Panorama Cotton laughs at your cheap games.
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# ? Aug 5, 2016 02:34 |
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Instant Sunrise posted:I kinda missed out on the entire 16 bit era, going straight from the NES to the N64, so Sega was just never really a thing for me Same here. Went from NES (and PC/C64) to the N64. Played more Genesis at friends' houses than SNES during those years, but any 16-bit games I am really interested in these days are on the SNES. I have a handful of Genesis games still, but didn't have room for the console, so sold it and just settle with a Retron and Retrogen for what little Genesis games I want to play. Not a knock on Sega or the console, just my tastes and preferences for things I had nostalgia for. I have the Sonic games, PS4, Castlevania: Bloodlines, Sub-terrania, Aladdin, Lion King, Power Rangers, James Bond: The Duel, Earthworm Jim, and crappy sports games. There are a couple more I'd like to get, but honestly PS4 and Castlevania are the only ones I haven't really played thoroughly yet that I really have a desire to play still. I'll play James Bond or Earthworm Jim here and there, but thats it as far as my Genesis gaming goes. Any other big heavy hitters I should check out? I do plan on doing a James Bond in video games video as my first (and maybe only) Youtube attempt. So I will put some time into the Duel. And I still need to play FF3 on the SNES, have only played it on the PS1 (and a little on GBA, but stopped so I can just play on SNES) so far, but plan to play through PS4 after that since people seems to debate which is better (though Chrono Trigger usually gets decided as the true answer). FireMrshlBill fucked around with this message at 02:50 on Aug 5, 2016 |
# ? Aug 5, 2016 02:37 |
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http://www.ebay.com.au/itm/Phantasy-Star-IV-4-Ozisoft-Australian-Sega-Mega-Drive-/162157910610?hash=item25c15d5a52:g:6wIAAOSwyLlXopWl Heck.
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# ? Aug 5, 2016 02:51 |
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You can't talk about Sega without bringing up the objectively best game that's also super cheap: Rocket Knight Adventures. Other cheap off-the-beaten-path games: Gauntlet 4 (the best Gauntlet), Herzog Zwei, Super Turrican, Elemental Master, General Chaos, and Starflight. Really you can't go wrong with anything from Sonic's Ultimate Genesis Collection.
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# ? Aug 5, 2016 02:58 |
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I went straight from Gameboy to Gamecube and didn't even know that Sega made consoles until years after the Dreamcast died and now I love my Dreamcast
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# ? Aug 5, 2016 03:03 |
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If I am going to have the tv with the consoles next to my PC, would a 14 inch be fine? Especially if I am getting a Sony PVM in that size?
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# ? Aug 5, 2016 03:05 |
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If it's at a desk, yes. I know I just posted a picture of this, but this is what it looks like from a distance. It does take a fair bit of desk space to do, but...
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# ? Aug 5, 2016 03:07 |
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Caitlin posted:If it's at a desk, yes. How big is that tv anyway? Also like the Sailor Jupiter sign.
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# ? Aug 5, 2016 03:11 |
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About 15" Samsung CRT, my 20" PVM is on another table. The monitors are 23" LGs.
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# ? Aug 5, 2016 03:18 |
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Caitlin posted:About 15" Samsung CRT, my 20" PVM is on another table. The monitors are 23" LGs. Ha, I saw the picture and thought "wow, those look like my 23" Flatron IPS monitor...", especially the on on the left, and "I have those Cyber Acoustics speakers".
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# ? Aug 5, 2016 03:25 |
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FireMrshlBill posted:Ha, I saw the picture and thought "wow, those look like my 23" Flatron IPS monitor...", especially the on on the left, and "I have those Cyber Acoustics speakers". Those speakers are not half bad for $40 speakers!
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# ? Aug 5, 2016 03:27 |
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Rirse posted:If I am going to have the tv with the consoles next to my PC, would a 14 inch be fine? Especially if I am getting a Sony PVM in that size? Sitting at a desk should be fine. Though, I've played sitting back (5' away or so) from 13"/14" CRT's in the past... and ever since college, that has been a no go for me. I end up losing interest in whatever game too fast because I had a hard time seeing. I am not sure how I was able to sit across the room from a 13" CRT growing up and being able to play games. Caitlin posted:Those speakers are not half bad for $40 speakers! Haha, not at all. They replaced a decent set of 4.1 speakers that died and I just didn't want to spend money because I'll be upgrading my surround sound in my game room once I move, and just wanted something to hold me over. I may not now. Plus the aux in is great. FireMrshlBill fucked around with this message at 03:31 on Aug 5, 2016 |
# ? Aug 5, 2016 03:28 |
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al-azad posted:You can't talk about Sega without bringing up the objectively best game that's also super cheap: Rocket Knight Adventures. As of late I have been writing many words about this game so for right now I'll just say everyone should play Rocket Knight Adventures
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# ? Aug 5, 2016 04:09 |
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So in really strange news that I somehow missed for 4 months, Suda51 is localizing an HD remaster of Grasshopper's first game The Silver Case. It's a visual novel that was certainly eye catching in 1999 in an era where Chunsoft dominated the market with really samey looking sound novels. I don't know how it would be received now but it's nice seeing more of his work reaching a wider audience.
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# ? Aug 5, 2016 04:13 |
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Kthulhu5000 posted:Crossed wires? Yes, the TG16 was a thing, but let's face it, it was never a contender compared to the neck-and-neck rivalry of the Genesis and SNES. People can be forgiven for not getting on the TG16 wagon, but there's no excuse to not get on the Genesis one. I didn't mention the TG16. I was joking around because your wording made it sound like the Genesis was the lesser half of the 16-bit era and I've always been a huge Sega fanboy. azurite fucked around with this message at 04:33 on Aug 5, 2016 |
# ? Aug 5, 2016 04:28 |
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Kthulhu5000 posted:EDIT: Also, Sonic 3: I had both a model 1 and model 2 back when I was younger, but the TVs we had were so awful that I couldn't tell the difference. I'm glad that the sound players seem to closely resemble the model 1's version. As for the model 2, uh quote:Clockwork Bard 1 week ago
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# ? Aug 5, 2016 05:43 |
Cliche Guevara posted:Pain in the rear end to assemble and setup though? Will have to look into it. Would love to play some of these old gems in the N64 and PS1 libraries! Like five posts above yours talks about how you shouldn't get your hopes up to emulate N64 stuff. I haven't tried a lot of PSX stuff, but what I have tried has worked pretty well though. And it's absolutely not a pain in the rear end to setup, especially if you've only got NES/SNES/GB/Sega in mind. It already comes pre-assembled, all you have to do is put it inside a plastic case (takes thirty seconds, and honestly is totally optional if you don't mind just keeping a bare motherboard sitting out). Then you download the image file for Retropie from the official site, stick your microSD into your PC, format it, and install the image on it. Take it out, stick it in the Pi, plug in a controller, and turn it on. Move some buttons around on the controller to configure it, takes ten seconds. Done. All that remains is to load up your ROMs onto the machine and (completely optionally) scrape the metadata for them. The entire process from opening the box your Pi comes in to playing a game should take no more than a half hour at the absolute most. It only gets more complicated if you want to do systems that require you to load the BIOS for the console you want to emulate, even then it's just a matter of getting the BIOS and loading it into the Pi. Or if you want to do more advanced personalization of control schemes per-game or per-emulator, or set up MAME stuff. Everything is very well documented, all of what you will need to know is in an easy-to-use wiki, and there are a billion guides on Youtube. Drone fucked around with this message at 05:55 on Aug 5, 2016 |
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# ? Aug 5, 2016 05:46 |
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Instant Sunrise posted:It's pretty tricky since the video encoder chip is surface mount, and probably not something I'd suggest doing if you've never soldered before. Is this only for 1 Chip consoles?
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# ? Aug 5, 2016 06:31 |
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Only for the SNES mini. The full size onechips don't need a mod for RGB or S-Video.
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# ? Aug 5, 2016 06:40 |
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Joke's on you, Nintendo. I bought your Smash Bros Gamecube Controller for the WiiU, and you know what I'm gonna use it for? Gamecube games .
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# ? Aug 5, 2016 07:59 |
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Miles McCloud posted:Only for the SNES mini. The full size onechips don't need a mod for RGB or S-Video. So I found a 1 chip super famicom and I have an s-video cable but my flat screen doesn't have s-video inputs. It only has HDMI and component. What are my options to get it to work on it?
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# ? Aug 5, 2016 09:24 |
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Risky posted:So I found a 1 chip super famicom and I have an s-video cable but my flat screen doesn't have s-video inputs. It only has HDMI and component. What are my options to get it to work on it? Your best option would be to get a SCART RGB-to-HDMI converter. This could be one of the cheap ones on Amazon (no idea which, if any, are worth a drat), which may be kind of slow in their conversion and introduce input lag. Or you could go whole hog for the XRGB Framemeister. Keep in mind that you would also need to get a SCART cable (or cables, if you want to hook up other consoles), either way. Don't bother with trying to convert anything to component video on a flat screen LCD; odds are, your TV won't pick up an analog signal that is less than 480p.
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# ? Aug 5, 2016 11:12 |
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14" CRT is fine for playing from a long arm's reach away, but 480i/576i from a PS3 s-video is eye-murdering at any distance. I need to get those cables or passthrough from my scaler.
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# ? Aug 5, 2016 12:14 |
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Drone posted:It's super simple nowadays. Just never ever unplug your Pi without shutting it down first, otherwise you'll corrupt your microSD card. In fact, once you get everything set up the way you want it with all of your roms and emulators configured perfectly for your tastes, immediately make a backup of the microSD card image to your PC or laptop. That way in case it ever does go corrupt, you can restore it within a matter of minutes. I have to say after reading this I went to try PSX on my Pi 3 and wow I am stunned how well it runs games pretty much flawlessly at 60 fps incredible! I honestly just never tried on mine simply because N64 ran like crap and I just felt PSX would be the same. This completely opens up a new bunch of games for me to revisit and in the case of imports to try on my Pi so thanks!
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# ? Aug 5, 2016 14:23 |
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al-azad posted:The Gaijin Gamer's Guide to Japanese (to guide you through the mountain of import games) drat, this is good stuff. Thank you
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# ? Aug 5, 2016 14:28 |
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Anyone got a recommendation for a good screwdriver kit for console repair? I need to take apart my Wii U gamepad and it needs those "tri-tip" screwdrivers, and rather than just buy the two I'd need I'd rather get a bunch of them and not have to buy any more for the foreseeable future.
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# ? Aug 5, 2016 14:42 |
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Kthulhu5000 posted:Your best option would be to get a SCART RGB-to-HDMI converter. This could be one of the cheap ones on Amazon (no idea which, if any, are worth a drat), which may be kind of slow in their conversion and introduce input lag. Or you could go whole hog for the XRGB Framemeister. Keep in mind that you would also need to get a SCART cable (or cables, if you want to hook up other consoles), either way. You can also pick up S-Video to HDMI scalers that are a decent and inexpensive middle ground between composite and going full hog with RGB SCART.
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# ? Aug 5, 2016 14:59 |
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I was thinking of fun ways to break old games. Walk through walls codes for rpgs are always great for this. But I was just thinking. Are there any Game Genie or Code Shark codes for Final Fantasy VI or Chrono Trigger or even Earthbound where you can move your character no matter what? Meaning, even during "cut scenes"?
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# ? Aug 5, 2016 17:27 |
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Instant Sunrise posted:Is there a decent consensus about which model of Genesis sounds the best or is it a subjective "the Genesis model I had as a kid is the best sounding one?" A launch aka "High Definition Graphics" unit, or a VA6, both are model 1 variants. The HDG is easy to spot, and a lot of people prefer them (not me, and i'll explain) because they have really loud bass compared to every other Genesis. The VA6 is a bit harder to spot, but easily recognized by the flat panel of plastic where the EXT port used to be near the AV/PSU inputs. The VA6 has properly mixed sound (the HDG's bass is actually mixed too loud, causing distortion), and stereo audio through the headphone jack is cleaner than on most other models (on an HDG, turning the volume slider up to more than around halfway causes it to crackle).
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# ? Aug 5, 2016 17:29 |
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I'll actually warn about the HDG models, the VA1 of them is very rough sounding, because the PSG channels run way too hot. Rings in Sonic and drums in games will sound very scratchy and loud compared to a VA2-6 or the VA3/4 model 2's. The Nomad and CDX also sound really good through the headphone jacks because they have actual headphone amps inside of them.
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# ? Aug 5, 2016 17:30 |
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Silhouette posted:A launch aka "High Definition Graphics" unit, or a VA6, both are model 1 variants. Bass is too loud as in they were trying to compensate for the lovely small speakers that most TV's had and still have?
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# ? Aug 5, 2016 17:34 |
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Elliotw2 posted:I'll actually warn about the HDG models, the VA1 of them is very rough sounding, because the PSG channels run way too hot. Rings in Sonic and drums in games will sound very scratchy and loud compared to a VA2-6 or the VA3/4 model 2's. The CDX in general is very good if you can get a hold of one. Even when you plop a 32X onto it it's still very compact, you're only using two power adapters (because the CD and Genesis only need the one power supply in the CDX), and with a 32X in you have almost the best quality sound and video of any Genesis setup before modding gets into things.
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# ? Aug 5, 2016 17:40 |
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# ? May 13, 2024 10:39 |
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Uncle at Nintendo posted:I was thinking of fun ways to break old games. Walk through walls codes for rpgs are always great for this. But I was just thinking. Are there any Game Genie or Code Shark codes for Final Fantasy VI or Chrono Trigger or even Earthbound where you can move your character no matter what? Meaning, even during "cut scenes"? Good question and likely depends on programming nuances of the game in question. It's not uncommon for games to have the "cutscene" not technically using the "player" for its visible graphics, I think especially in cases where the characters perform actions with graphics you don't see in the normal game, although I could also see it being something like "the entire stack of code which controls movement/menus etc. is unloaded so more resources are available to make the cutscene extra fancy." This would mean it's not just flipping a switch. That said, some games do legit have bugs based around this kind of idea, like if you hit an action button or direction at a very precise time (like exact frame) you can sequence break an on-rails section or avoid a hotzone that triggers a cutscene, like in FF6 during the multi-storyline section in Locke's sequence, you can escape the city if you time it super-precisely and skip getting Celes entirely. It's a difficult but human-doable trick and common in speedruns of the game. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZR7oZ6wZTqw univbee fucked around with this message at 17:42 on Aug 5, 2016 |
# ? Aug 5, 2016 17:40 |