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This stack of games also works.

But it lags tremendously. I have a friend who did the exact same thing many years ago. Took forever to get things in the right order so that it would boot up at all, but it worked.

There was like, a solid 3/4 second lag between pushing a button and getting a response on-screen. It's amazing. :D
 
This stack of games also works.

But it lags tremendously. I have a friend who did the exact same thing many years ago. Took forever to get things in the right order so that it would boot up at all, but it worked.

There was like, a solid 3/4 second lag between pushing a button and getting a response on-screen. It's amazing. :D
I don't understand what that is, care to enlighten those of us that don't know? :P
 
I don't understand what that is, care to enlighten those of us that don't know? :p
It's a bunch of Sega games/peripherals attached to each other. Typically, only one or two would ever really be used at once, but due to the modular nature of the console, it was possible to link up all of these devices at once.

However they had to be compatible with each other. For intance, For instance, Sonic 3 & Knuckles had a slot on the top of it that would let you insert a Sonic 2 cartridge into it, and then you could actually play with Knuckles in Sonic 2, because it basically inserted its code into another game this way.

It was really quite brilliant for its time.
 
It's a bunch of Sega games/peripherals attached to each other. Typically, only one or two would ever really be used at once, but due to the modular nature of the console, it was possible to link up all of these devices at once.

However they had to be compatible with each other. For intance, For instance, Sonic 3 & Knuckles had a slot on the top of it that would let you insert a Sonic 2 cartridge into it, and then you could actually play with Knuckles in Sonic 2, because it basically inserted its code into another game this way.

It was really quite brilliant for its time.
Neato, thanks!
 
also, the game genie at the bottom, was a cheat cartridge, that would unlock loads of hacks/glitches.
 
It's a bunch of Sega games/peripherals attached to each other. Typically, only one or two would ever really be used at once, but due to the modular nature of the console, it was possible to link up all of these devices at once.

However they had to be compatible with each other. For intance, For instance, Sonic 3 & Knuckles had a slot on the top of it that would let you insert a Sonic 2 cartridge into it, and then you could actually play with Knuckles in Sonic 2, because it basically inserted its code into another game this way.

It was really quite brilliant for its time.
Games should go back to being cartridges. Maybe USB ones this time...
 
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