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The only limit is usually the cost of an EPROM programmer, but [Robson] has that covered now with his Arduino-based SNES EPROM programmer.
As crazy as it would've been to imagine Sonic the Hedgehog running on an SNES back in the 90s, one programmer has managed to do just that.
Let’s say you had a SNES with a busted CPU. What would you do? Your SNES would be through! That is, unless, you had a replacement based on an FPGA. [leonllr] has been developing just such a t… ...
The NES Classic and SNES Classic feature identical controller ports — it happens to be the same port that the Wii used — and we can confirm that the two consoles’ throwback gamepads are ...
The fabled SNES-CD peripheral may have never actually made it to market in the mid-'90s as planned. But that hasn't stopped homebrew developers from utilizing the magic of emulation to make ...
The Super Nintendo Entertainment System (SNES). Fifteen years ago, there was something of a competition between two SNES emulators: ZSNES and SNES9x. ZSNES was a bit faster, and SNES9x a bit more ...
When it comes to the art and science of retro gaming, Analogue has no equal. The small company that first brought us the Analogue Nt, then the Nt mini, is back again with the Super Nt – a ...