Re: Mini-NES
Posted: 16 Jul 2016 17:50
Do any of our European Wii U users want to chime in?A Beta Fu7ure wrote:I honestly don't know. The last new Nintendo console I bought was the Wii which wasn't using HDMI leads.
A retro gaming & game culture community on a retro platform.
https://thisoldneon.com/forum/
Do any of our European Wii U users want to chime in?A Beta Fu7ure wrote:I honestly don't know. The last new Nintendo console I bought was the Wii which wasn't using HDMI leads.
They won't have a choice with some games. If they intend to give us Final Fantasy then their is no PAL version. Same goes for Super C (It was Probotector over here). These games were released as 60hz "imports" on the PAL VC.MerlinDrazziw wrote:Just checked on the Wii U eShop and it seems a lot of NES games are the US version. You can check it on the eShop site.
Gives some hope for the mini NES getting these same 60Hz versions.
A lot of games on the eshop does mention "This is the North American version of the game" which sort of implies 60Hz.A Beta Fu7ure wrote:They won't have a choice with some games. If they intend to give us Final Fantasy then their is no PAL version. Same goes for Super C (It was Probotector over here). These games were released as 60hz "imports" on the PAL VC.MerlinDrazziw wrote:Just checked on the Wii U eShop and it seems a lot of NES games are the US version. You can check it on the eShop site.
Gives some hope for the mini NES getting these same 60Hz versions.
The real difference maker here could be that this is designed for HD TV's as I seem to recall that 50hz games don't play nicely on modern TV's.
If it's only HDMI means the only way is via adaptors, which most are expensive due to the need to convert the signal format.A Beta Fu7ure wrote:On that note: Can you still hook this up to ordinary TV's?
A Beta Fu7ture wrote:Since I live in Asia now, I'd have to import one of these anyway, so I'd just get the NTSC version but I'll still be pissed of on behalf of Europeans everywhere if Nintendo gimp yet another classic game release.
(Side note: Super Metroid did actually receive some optimization at the time to partially speed correct it.)
(Side note 2: That e-shop is horrible. The search function seems broken to the point that I couldn't even locate any NES games even when ticking only the NES box.)
Super Mario Bros., Super Mario Bros. 3, Legend of Zelda, Legend of Zelda II, Ninja Gaiden, etc., all are US versions on the Wii U eShop. Would be harder to find a non US version I think.kawaiipikachu wrote:A lot of games on the eshop does mention "This is the North American version of the game" which sort of implies 60Hz.A Beta Fu7ture wrote:Since I live in Asia now, I'd have to import one of these anyway, so I'd just get the NTSC version but I'll still be pissed of on behalf of Europeans everywhere if Nintendo gimp yet another classic game release.
(Side note: Super Metroid did actually receive some optimization at the time to partially speed correct it.)
(Side note 2: That e-shop is horrible. The search function seems broken to the point that I couldn't even locate any NES games even when ticking only the NES box.)
I don't know all the specifics, but I'm pretty sure it only has a HDMI port. Considering it doesn't even come with a power adapter (must use USB) I'm thinking they went super minimal with this.A Beta Fu7ure wrote:
On that note: Can you still hook this up to ordinary TV's?
If it only has HDMI this this adaptor here if you want to plug it into an older TV.The Shoemaker wrote:I don't know all the specifics, but I'm pretty sure it only has a HDMI port. Considering it doesn't even come with a power adapter (must use USB) I'm thinking they went super minimal with this.A Beta Fu7ure wrote:
On that note: Can you still hook this up to ordinary TV's?