Editing GameBoy
While there have been many varied portable gaming systems over the years, Nintendo's GameBoy has single-handedly dominated the market. It's last real competition was the Sega GameGear. The GameBoy has been reinvented several times, and a list of its various incarnations follows. The original GameBoy was slightly smaller than a typical brick. It used 4 AA batteries and came in the same color as the typical PC case of the day. It had a monochrome display, a built-in speaker, 4 buttons (A, B, select, start) and a directional pad. The GameBoy Pocket was much like its predecessor, except it was slimmer, came in different colors, and (if I recall correctly) did not have the battery life of the original as it ran off of 2 AAA batteries. The Super GameBoy was an accessory for the SuperNintendo which allowed one to play GameBoy games via a SuperNintendo. The GameBoy Color added the long overdue upgrade to a color display, surpassing the Lynx, though its color depth was ''still'' inferior to the GameGear. It used 2 AA batteries and also sported a nifty infrared communications port that was for the most part useless except for mystery gifting. The GameBoy Advance marked the [[GameBoy]]'s first complete overhaul. The unit now sported power greater than a SuperNintendo. Indeed, it even added two shoulder buttons, allowing developers to possibly port SuperNintendo games to the GBA if they dropped two buttons. The new link cable also allowed for up to four players to play together without an extra accessory. The GameBoy Advance SP introduced a clamshell design with a much-needed built-in lighting solution and rechargeable lithium ion battery. It also removed the headphone port, so you'll have to buy an adapter to use headphones on an SP. The GameBoy Player is an accessory for the GameCube that allows one to play GameBoy Advance games on the GameCube. The GameBoy Micro is the third variation of the GameBoy Advance. It includes all the features of the SP, but in a package barely larger than an Advance cartridge. It also allows for changing the faceplate, for the fashion concious among you. ---- Does ''your'' original Game Boy still work? Yes: *RichardGarfinkel *AdamField, though the older one's screen just fell off. Yes, I have two - I got that one for $5 and then the other one free. *AlexBobbs (although there's a line of pixels that doesn't work, since my little brother threw the thing across the room about 13 years ago) *AlexUtter *MarissaQuitt *KevinOelze (though on a trip to the beach, some sand got in the power switch, so it takes a non-trivial amount of force to turn it on/off) *RobinDobashi (the screen's fallen off, but it's still as good as always) *JeremyWestfahl (although I usually use my Super Game Boy instead) No: *MarissaQuitt (I had one, which broke, and another one I bought for taking something else away at a garage sale.) ---- Goddamn this NeedsRewriting.
Summary:
This change is a minor edit.
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