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Well, the Gods of Stupidity and Money Wasting have teamed up once again to offer the latest handheld gaming device to the masses: the Pocket Famicom. To those of you who don't know this (which is probably very few people who read news on this site), the Famicom is the Japanese name for what is States-side called the Nintendo Entertainment System, or NES. Lik-Sang has brought us the portable solution to those of us that are still blowing in their old NES game slots to make their games work; this new portable system can also be connected to a TV to function essentially as another NES console. Don't get me wrong, but with the PSP, playing what are still considered top-of-the-line games, coming out and the DS playing nearly flawless SNES converts, why would someone pay the $80 price tag to buy a system that makes you carry around retardedly large cartridges that have much smaller conversions of the better games thanks to Nintendo's new "classic" line of games released for the GBA?
The Pocket Famicom can be seen here.
Well, the Gods of Stupidity and Money Wasting have teamed up once again to offer the latest handheld gaming device to the masses: the Pocket Famicom. To those of you who don't know this (which is probably very few people who read news on this site), the Famicom is the Japanese name for what is States-side called the Nintendo Entertainment System, or NES. Lik-Sang has brought us the portable solution to those of us that are still blowing in their old NES game slots to make their games work; this new portable system can also be connected to a TV to function essentially as another NES console. Don't get me wrong, but with the PSP, playing what are still considered top-of-the-line games, coming out and the DS playing nearly flawless SNES converts, why would someone pay the $80 price tag to buy a system that makes you carry around retardedly large cartridges that have much smaller conversions of the better games thanks to Nintendo's new "classic" line of games released for the GBA?
The Pocket Famicom can be seen here.