Looks cool with 4k upscaling support. We’ll have to see about price, since we have the Mister and the upcoming Mars to compare it to.

So the controller is just a knockoff of a Retrofighters Brawler64?

It’s hardly a unique innovation. You have the same buttons and “modern” layouts, you get this.

.:\dGh/:.
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11Y

deleted by creator

@v1605@lemmy.world
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31Y

At the bottom of the page “Analogue 3D does not support openFPGA 2”. Unless this comes in at a competitive price Mister or Mars are a much better value proposition unless you’re a die hard cart user.

.:\dGh/:.
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51Y

Given it’s very niche and doesn’t play ROMs, I guess $200.

@WalrusByte@lemmy.world
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51Y

FPGAs can get pretty expensive. I’d say $300+

.:\dGh/:.
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21Y

Dunno about that. Last time I checked it would depend also on the volume. How much would cost this FPGA alone around 1000 units.

@WalrusByte@lemmy.world
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11Y

Yeah, that makes sense

@v1605@lemmy.world
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31Y

Agreed, even with the eventual “jailbreak” it would have to be priced around that. I think it will be more expensive since the N64 core is pretty large and it is supposed to support 4k.

@echo64@lemmy.world
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71Y

Analogues consoles complement a mister, if you want a system that will play your games, and look good on your big flat screen tv then analogue do very very well

if you want more than that, sure a mister works but it’s a lot more effort and work, especially if you are not familiar with linux.

different products for different kinds of people.

@v1605@lemmy.world
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11Y

We’ll see how Mars compares when that is released. The UI looks a lot more polished compared to the Mister.

I will argue most people buying these consoles will eventually want to play more than just original carts, which means more setup either via a jailbreak or everdrive. I’d say both of those are not any more difficult to set up than a prebuilt Mister.

@echo64@lemmy.world
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11Y

I would probably argue the opposite. most people who buy an analogue device will use it s few times to relive some childhood memories than it’ll sit on a shelf for a long time

For people that get engaged and want to do more, mister or a pocket with open fpga is a good next step. But most people just want to play the three nintendo games they loved

@v1605@lemmy.world
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01Y

I’d argue that type of person would see the price of an analogue system, then proceed to go on eBay for an N64 and a cheap composite adapter.

@echo64@lemmy.world
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11Y

Yup a lot do, or more realisticly just don’t. But there are those that have the money for an analogue system (or a mister, they ain’t cheap!) Hence why they sell

There’s a decent amount of mister kit sites that sell a complete set up. As far as having to know Linux I’m not sure it’s any more than you would for transferring roms to a sd card. Another thing mister has going for it is you can buy these preassembled “kits” today. Every time I get my eyes set on an Analogue system they sell out immediately and go onto eBay for much higher prices. Misteraddons today I can buy a complete set up (with a sd card pre-flashed) for ~$550.

I would be 100% all about analogue if I could buy a system. That being said maybe it’s just because I am interested in NES/SNES so those are the higher demand systems. I have a Mister but actually play more on my modded NES.

Like you said different products for different folks but I don’t think the barrier to entry for mister is very high anymore.

@echo64@lemmy.world
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21Y

Ehh it’s still very high. What you have to do with an analogue system to take advantage of the open fpga stuff is already too complex tbh.

It’s easy to forget how difficult this stuff can be when you are knowledgeable on it. I used to be a developer on a very popular Linux distribution, and we dealt with this a lot. People have enough going on in their lives without having to understand how this stuff works.

That’s why the analogue systems are so great, legitimately plug and play all your old games. If you wanna do more, mister is there and so is a 4 hour mlig video about how to do things with it

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