Browse Items (23 total)
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Sony Tablet S
The Sony Tablet S was released in 2011 around the same time the Xperia Play 2 was cancelled, much like the Xperia Play 2 the Sony Tablet S was also PlayStation Certified meaning you could download PlayStation Portable games.
Sadly an update to the PlayStation Store made the tablet unable to download & purchase PS One Classics. -
Nintendo 3DS Kiosk Unit
An incomplete Nintendo 3DS Kiosk unit, this is missing the base station and parts normally used within shops.
Unlike retail Nintendo 3DS consoles, this can only be used while powered. -
Nintendo Game Boy
The Game Boy is an 8-bit fourth generation handheld game console developed and manufactured by Nintendo. It was first released in Japan on April 21, 1989, in North America later the same year, and in Europe in late 1990. It was designed by the same team that developed the Game & Watch series of handheld electronic games and several Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) games: Satoru Okada, Gunpei Yokoi, and Nintendo Research & Development 1. -
SONY Ericsson Xperia Play
The Xperia Play is a smartphone with elements of a handheld game console produced by Sony Ericsson. With the marketshare for dedicated handheld game consoles diminishing into the 2010s due to the rapid expansion of smartphones with cheap downloadable games, Sony attempted to tackle the issue with two separate devices; a dedicated video game console with elements of a smartphone, called the PlayStation Vita, and a smartphone with elements of a handheld console, the Xperia Play. Originally rumored to be a "PlayStation Phone", the device shed the "PlayStation" branding in favor of the Xperia brand, running on the Android operating system. -
PlayStation 5 Prototype motherboard "EDM-BR10"
The following item is a prototype PlayStation 5 motherboard, this version which is EDM-BR10 wasn't released to the public.
EDM-BR10 appears to be the diskless motherboard, another such board named EDM-AR10 exists, which appears to be the disk based version.
Our board appears to be a reject, and was as such disposed off in e-waste, it then suffered from water damage along with damage to the motherboard rendering it unrepairable at this time.
The EDM-BR10 board still retains a PVT (Product Validation Testing) WiFi chip.
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Microvision
The Microvision (aka Milton Bradley Microvision or MB Microvision) is the first handheld game console that used interchangeable cartridges and in that sense is reprogrammable.
It was released by the Milton Bradley Company in November 1979 for a retail price of $49.99.
The Microvision was designed by Jay Smith, the engineer who would later design the Vectrex gaming console. The Microvision's combination of portability and a cartridge-based system led to moderate success, with Smith Engineering grossing $15 million in the first year of the system's release. However, very few cartridges, a small screen, and a lack of support from established home video game companies led to its demise in 1981. According to Satoru Okada, the former head of Nintendo's R&D1 Department, the Microvision gave birth to Game Boy, the follow up to Game & Watch, after Nintendo designed around Microvision's limitations.