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BadassFractal | 4 years ago

I got bitten by a fake SNES Classic off of ebay a few years back. I was super excited to play Super Mario RPG on the real thing, only to find out that it was running with all sorts of glitches due to how the clone device had been designed, to the point where it was unusable. I suppose it's a pretty good scam since the thing goes for $200+ these days and I'm guessing it's some kind of a low powered android device on the inside.

Haven't quite figured out how to play those old classics again.

discuss

order

ok_dad|4 years ago

I've got an SNES from when I was a kid in the 90s, but it's not in great shape I don't think. I'll dig it out and see if it works in two weeks (I'm moving) if you email me (in profile). If it does, I could part with it for shipping cost and a trade of some other thing you have that you don't want, maybe. I think I've lost the TV adapters though, so I can't be sure it will work or not. I have a few games too, not sure which ones. I'm not too into classic games, everytime I play them I get really bored.

petepete|4 years ago

I think the best option is to use a Mister FPGA. The SNES core works flawlessly.

https://emulation.gametechwiki.com/index.php/MiSTer

louhike|4 years ago

MiSTer FPGA is great, and I love it. But I would recommend it mostly to people willing to spend several hundreds to be able to play with higher fidelity and less input lags than emulation. It's almost the perfect solution (you can even play on CRT and OG controllers), but I tend to think it's mostly for passionate people.