LYCOS RETRIEVER
Nintendo Entertainment System: Super Nes
built 134 days ago
Nintendo took the same stance against SNES ROM image files and emulation as it did with the NES, insisting that they were nothing but flagrant piracy. Many arguments to make the them legal have been made. Such arguments generally concerned the discontinued production, frailty of cartridges, and lack of certain foreign imports. Now, as part of the 128-bit era, the revival of SNES is settling down to some extent.
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Nintendo released the NES 2 in 1993. It was a smaller, cheaper version of the original NES in a more SNESish case with a standard cartridge slot (instead of the "zero insertion force" slot in the original NES which was very dirt-prone and easy to break). Nintendo pushed the system for the upcoming Christmas season for $49.
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During the late 1990s and early 2000s the NES became much more than a video game system released 10 to 20 years ago in the eyes of the public. It became quite possible to see someone wearing a NES controller belt [1] or other "retro" styled clothing [2] covered with images Nintendo started.
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Other NES controllers were released, by Nintendo and third-parties. Popular ones include the NES Max, a sleeker controller with a round control pad, and the NES Advantage, and arcade-style joystick with slow-motion and autofire.
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The most common reason for NES games not to work is the dirt on the game cartridges themselves or the connectors within the NES system. Rarely games fail due to the manufacturing reasons.
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