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Anyone pick up a NES mini today? Or planning on getting one eventually?

I don't have a TV it will play on, however it's better than the Wii U VC, the colors and size are correct. (I'll post the video comparing them later.)
 
Oh, if an SNES mini comes out, I will take on a busload of nuns to get to it. Seriously, Nintendo should have allowed for pre-orders.

Like I said earlier, manufactured scarcity has been Nintendo's M.O. for like a decade.

In any event, I actually buy the company's logic in not over-producing units -- this box is going to hit a very, very harsh wall of diminishing returns when it comes to entertainment value, considering it has literally zero options for expansion. You've got those 30 games, and that's that -- and the nostalgia value's going to wear off pretty quickly once people remember that a lot of those games are fun for about fifteen minutes, tops. After that, it'll be a box that sits in the closet that comes out for, like, Thanksgiving or a family reunion ... and gets played for about fifteen minutes as everyone gets a pass at The Legend of Zelda and remembers, "Oh, yeah, this game is bullshit." And Nintendo would be sitting on a warehouse full of inventory, not unlike the Wii U.
 
You don't like Legend of Zelda? I spent many hours two years ago trying to beat that game for the first time, and I finally succeed. Now the NES Mini is getting a lot of play from me because I'm working on Zelda 2, and possibly Metroid, if I get around to it.
 
Like I said earlier, manufactured scarcity has been Nintendo's M.O. for like a decade.

In any event, I actually buy the company's logic in not over-producing units -- this box is going to hit a very, very harsh wall of diminishing returns when it comes to entertainment value, considering it has literally zero options for expansion. You've got those 30 games, and that's that -- and the nostalgia value's going to wear off pretty quickly once people remember that a lot of those games are fun for about fifteen minutes, tops. After that, it'll be a box that sits in the closet that comes out for, like, Thanksgiving or a family reunion ... and gets played for about fifteen minutes as everyone gets a pass at The Legend of Zelda and remembers, "Oh, yeah, this game is bullshit." And Nintendo would be sitting on a warehouse full of inventory, not unlike the Wii U.
Fair point. My Xbox One sits mostly unused, mainly because games are too expensive, and because damn near everything requires a subscription.

This made me laugh, but were that day ever to come - you wouldn't be fighting alone.
Teamwork! :lol:
 
Here's an alternative: RetroEngine Sigma.

A little device that runs emulators. You still need to find your own game ROMs but that's not difficult.

I've been tempted by the NES Mini myself but it still seems to only be available from ebay scalpers charging over £100. Also, as someone mentioned above, with no opportunities for expansion it's possible the novelty will wear off pretty fast.
 
My friend has something similar ^ Raspberry something that plays emulators that you put onto a USB stick and then connect to the device so you can play on a TV. You can buy NES esq controllers for it too.
 
Yeah, I have one of those. Raspberry Pi is basically just a tiny Linux PC so it can be used for all sorts of purposes, including running emulators and making your own retro-gaming device.

It's not a plug-and-play console though, you need to install and configure the software for yourself.
 
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Yeah, I have a couple RPi emulators set up and they're great. RetroPie is easy to set up at this point, though--load the image to an SD card, hook it up to a TV, and go. You can even set up network shares pretty easily so you can put more games on it from another computer. Such a handy feature.
 
I probably won't be buying one. I have an actual NES and several games, Also, I acquired a beat up old windows windows 7 laptop at a pawnshop for 20 bucks. I cleaned it up, wiped the drive, reinstalled windows, threw some emulators on it (and some roms) bought 2 USB SNES controllers, and now I basically have a portable gaming center that Runs Sega Master System, Genesis, NES, SNES, TG16, NEOGEO, Atari, And MAME (Arcade) Games. I spent a grand total of 26 bucks, but what most people might not like is it took a total of 4-5 hours to set up. But I enjoy doing stuff like that, I can see where most wouldn't though.
 
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Trying desperately to find one that doesn't cost $200 on the interwebs.. My wife wants it JUST for Legend of Zelda... Oy! Toys R Us is stocking them, but won't give availability over the phone. grrrrr...
 
I love retro games, but the NES mini is sold purely on nostalgia and is nowhere near the best way to play these older games. I'd rather emulate or just hook up my actual NES. The NES mini would make a good Christmas gift, but I'd never buy one for myself.
 
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Yeah, I have a couple RPi emulators set up and they're great. RetroPie is easy to set up at this point, though--load the image to an SD card, hook it up to a TV, and go. You can even set up network shares pretty easily so you can put more games on it from another computer. Such a handy feature.


I too have a raspberry pi 2 and raspberry pi 3 gameboy I built



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I'd like the NES Mini, and if Nintendo ever decides to make more of them, and I can get one for the retail price, I'd definitely pick it up. Its much cheaper to get it then to buy the 30 games for Nintendo eshop prices, and I don't really like playing games on the computer, so emulators aren't really my favorite thing.

If a SNES one came out, I'd definitely get it. I only have a 3DS XL, so no SNES games, and I won't be getting another Nintendo console any time soon, so having a mini SNES would be even better then the mini NES.
 
Do you have a plasma TV? I haven't worried about burn in since monochrome monitors a lifetime ago. Anyway, from what I've read it has an as-is pixel perfect mode, a 4:3 mode, and a "CRT mode" with scanlines but I don't see anything about stretching the games. I haven't played any of these on virtual console on the Wiis but I imagine the same problem would have existed there.

Yes, I have a plasma. And they do suffer from burn-in, because my last one had it.
 
Word is that Nintendo sold a little under 200,000 of these things. So they vastly underestimated the demand, or intentionally under-shipped to drive up demand.

It's too bad, because I've already seen elsewhere that people who actually wanted this are probably going to lose interest now because of this.
 
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