>>391711330

what the fuck did you except?

What else would it be?

It's Peetendo wtf do you expect?

something resembling snes hardware at least, this is basically an emulator box

What the fuck did you think it was? It' s a plastic emulator.

Are you fucking stupid?

And the N64 version is probably going o be he same except wiith more memory. Who cares?

Don't worry he's a fucking retard.

Only a total retard would be surprised

>This is news

Nintendo milking their fans, nothing new here.

Sweet, so with a bit of modification, I can have the officially licensed hardware and play NES and SNES games on it!

Why would the SNES one be anything different from the NES one?

That said, it's a shame they didn't try a bit and make one of those one chip hardware clones like the C64 Direct-to-TV, instead of just a Rasberry Pi with no functionality running a pretty bad emulator. But then why try to make an interesting product when all the "I'm such a geek XD" faggots and fanboys will make it sell out the second it's announced.

So? Who cares if it works.

That's because it is an emulator box. The NES mini was also an emulator box. They were always emulator boxes. People were already shitting on Nintendo when these were first announced because they were selling emulators for $100. Why would anyone expect the hardware for the SNES emu to be any different from what they release for the NES emu?

Good it means it can be hacked just as quickly.
>super star wars/empire strikes back
>chrono trigger
>secret of mana 2
>pilotwings
>fire emblem
>Pokemon uranium

Could it run AM2R? If love to play that whilst being comfy

Why not just get a Pi?

It's a Linux machine user, it ain't gonna run anything that is not a rom unless someone decides to port it.

Fucking ZSNES is better than this $100 piece of shit novelty item.

It's an "official" product and not some stupid piece of shit. It's like you don't understand collector mentality.

A virtual machine is still a machine
:^)

Typical of Nintendo.

>It's an "official" product and not some stupid piece of shit.
Well, It's an "official" product and it's still some stupid piece of shit.
>It's like you don't understand collector mentality.
Guess I don't. Kinda glad that I don't. Only thing I've collected is a few ancient coins, because they had the best cost to historical value ratio.

just like the NES mini
why would you expect anything else

The SNES Classic isn't a virtual machine though.

It means that either the claims of the NES classic being made with a discontinued allwinner chipset are wrong, or the claims by Nintendo that there will not be shortages are wrong.

Or maybe they got a deal to get them back into production.

Could it run Genesis games?

If you hack it. Probably.

The hardware, absolutely. If you flashed an alternative OS or wrote a Genesis emulator for the launcher and found a way to put it on.

At that point it is more feasible to just get a pi and a SNES shell and put anything on it.

but the virtual snes it simulates is

How many more years till the 64 mini?

Did the NES classic suffer from the same input delay issues that all of the virtual consoles had?

The Virtual SNES's who's CPU is being emulated unlike a virtual machine which uses the hosts CPU.

Seeing as it's just Linux running Nintendo's proprietary emulator, most likley.

Not gonna happen.
N64 emulation in one of these cheap single board computers is pretty bad, it would be doable with inside knowledge of the workings of the machine and proper optimization, but that would require actual effort from Nintendo.

Also, taking into account the price scaling and hardware upgrade required, it would probably end up costing anywhere between $150-$200 at which point it stops being a novelty item and would sell like shit.

Call me when they take the SNES mini version of Star Fox 2 and dump the ROM on the web.

>something resembling snes hardware at least
... at like 1/4 of the size ?

>64 mini

Nintendo 64 emulation is many layers more complicated than SNES emulation. Just look at the state of N64 emulation. There is not a single accurate emulator out there at playable speeds. They're working on it though.

You've never heard of single-chip computers?

For example is a fully functional Commodore 64 computer. You can even plug in a C64 keyboard and tape drive into it and write programs for it if you want.

Hardly the problem, if they wanted some Real Authentic Hardware gimmick they could reimplement all the digital circuitry on an FPGA, or even make a custom SoC. That would also require much more effort and make the price skyrocket without any particularly large gains in functionality. Didn't some company reverse-engineer the thing and make a box just like that anyway? Or perhaps it was only the NES. I know there are hobbyist HDL designs floating around, but probably not particularly accurate, never checked them out myself.