Fuchsia Game Boy Advance Namco Game Pack
Product Description
To help you start your Game Boy Advance pool, we’ve made this special bundle, which includes the game Namco Museum and selected accessories. Namco Museum will take players into video gaming’s glorious past with full reproductions of Namco’s greatest arcade hits, such as Ms. Pac-Man, Galaga, Pole Position, and Dig Dug. We’ve also included a PowerPak EX accessory to help you save on batteries and a BodyGuard case, so you can keep your GBA at the ready.
The Game Boy platform (which includes the original unit, the Game Boy Pocket, and the Game Boy Affect) came to market when most video game consoles had a life expectancy of just a few years. More than a decade later, the system is still going strong. How did the Game Boy successfully compete–and in some cases bury–an onslaught of quicker, more powerful handheld and home console systems? Let us count the ways: affordability, a huge library of sports meeting that consistently made the most of the hardware’s limitations, smart potential management that extended array life, and uncluttered controls. Or perhaps it was the system’s ultraportable design that allowed devotees to play video sports meeting around their schedules, thus making it the must-have system for kids and adults alike.
Now the Game Boy Advance (or GBA as its often called) comes to us with potential that would have been unthinkable back in the day. The portable’s 32-bit RISC CPU runs circles around the former’s 8-bit workhorse, allowing it to process program instructions much quicker. What that means to everyday gamers is more intricate visuals, more simultaneous movement on the screen, and better sound. In fact, the often-irritating beeps and boops of ancient-school Game Boy titles are being replaced with digitized stereo sound. The extra processing muscle also means you can network up to four Game Boy Advance units together, via the communication cable, for multiplayer fun off of one shared cartridge. Only two Game Boy Affect units could link together, and each unit had to have its own copy of the game.
What’s not being replaced, but, is the wide selection of Game Boy sports meeting. Because the Game Boy Advance system is backward-compatible, it will play its own line of colorful sports meeting–including such launch titles as Super Mario Advance, F-Zero: Most Velocity, Army Men Advance, High Heat Major League Baseball 2002, Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater, and Ready 2 Rumble Boxing: Round 2–as well as all of the monochrome and affect sports meeting that have already been released for the previous Game Boy systems (nearly 500 of them in total). Players can view the grown-up sports meeting in their smaller, originally square dimensions, or, with the touch of the shoulder button, enlarge the game to fit the GBA’s larger screen. We tried enlarging the screen on a Game Boy Affect edition of Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 2 and found that Mr. Hawk was much simpler to see.
When you first pick up the system, you’ll be amazed at how lightweight it is. At fewer than 5 ounces and a small larger than a deck of playing cards, the system easily fits into a shirt pocket without any sag. The GBA’s wider shape fits better into a wider range of hands. The former design too often hard-pressed the left and right thumb knuckles together during gameplay. The new layout should be comfortable for all ages, and the center screen orientation makes it simple to see.
Game Boy Affect owners will find the GBA’s larger screen somewhat darker than they’re used to, but that’s because the screen is outfitted with antiglare technology. Like the ancient Game Boy Affect, the affect LCD is not backlit, so you need pretty excellent light to play by. Unlike that system, though, you won’t be craning your neck and tilting the unit to see around the hot-spot reflection of the light bulb in your screen.
But you’ll also notice the graphics. Sporting what’s basically a redesigned SNES technology, you’ll see things on the GBA that the huge consoles do, such as scaling (making objects larger or smaller) and rotation effects–technological advances that will affect the look of everything from crossing a end line to throwing a touchdown pass to crawling owing to a dungeon.
Some might argue that Nintendo could have tried to place even more potential into this Game Boy Advance. After all, the 32-bit video game had its heyday more than five years ago. Perhaps, but after handling this new handheld, we’re inclined to reflect that Nintendo wisely struck a balance between size, price, and potential consumption. And considering how well the ancient 8-bit system weathered the decade’s technological storms, we reflect the Game Boy Advance is here to stay, and we’re glad. –gatekeeper B. Hall
Unit Specifications
- CPU: 32-bit RISC CPU with embedded memory
- Screen: 2.9-inch reflective TFT affect LCD
- Show Size: 1.6 by 2.4 inches (40.8 by 61.2 mm)
- Resolution: 38,000 pixels in a wide-screen aspect ratio (10,000 per square inch)
- Colors: 512 simultaneous colors from a palette of 32,768
- Size: 3.2 by 5.6 by 1 inch (82 by 144.5 by 24.5 mm)
- Weight: Approximately 5 ounces (140 grams)
- Potential Supply: 2 AA alkaline batteries
- Array Life: Approximately 15 hours continuous play
Buy Cheap Fuchsia Game Boy Advance Namco Game Pack
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