by Flack » Sat Jun 01, 2024 3:41 am
The very, very first flashcart I ever bought was from a company called Tototek and it was for the Sega Genesis. I still have it somewhere but you wouldn't want it. I think it uses a parallel port cable and the software ran pretty good in Windows 98. The cart didn't have a case and so when you insert it, the plastic doors of the Genesis kind of grab on to the components, so you have to shove your fingers down in there to safely remove the cart.
When I joined Digital Press back in the early 00s I started collecting... well, everything. Atari carts, NES carts, and Genesis carts. The thing is, pretty much every video game cartridge came in a cardboard box except those clamshell-style cases for the Sega Genesis, which looked so great to display. At least back then, Genesis games were dirt cheap. I remember winning an eBay auction for 50 games for just over $50. (Seller was local, so no shipping!)
When I started my current job in 1995, there were a couple of thrift stores close enough that I could hit one or the other during lunch. There was the infamous summer where I declared I would purchase every Sega Genesis I found that was less than $5. I think I ended up with at least 10, and sold most of them later at gaming expos just to get rid of them. Literally, they were worthless.
What changed the Sega Genesis for me was an article that directly compared its capabilities to the Amiga. In my mind, the Amiga was a magical, untouchable machine and the Sega Genesis was, you know, a 16-bit console -- sure, it was better than the original NES and SMS, but on par with the Amiga? What they heck? That article inspired me to go back and look at the Genesis library with new eyes. I've appreciated it much more ever since.
What was the question? Gah.
The very, very first flashcart I ever bought was from a company called Tototek and it was for the Sega Genesis. I still have it somewhere but you wouldn't want it. I think it uses a parallel port cable and the software ran pretty good in Windows 98. The cart didn't have a case and so when you insert it, the plastic doors of the Genesis kind of grab on to the components, so you have to shove your fingers down in there to safely remove the cart.
When I joined Digital Press back in the early 00s I started collecting... well, everything. Atari carts, NES carts, and Genesis carts. The thing is, pretty much every video game cartridge came in a cardboard box except those clamshell-style cases for the Sega Genesis, which looked so great to display. At least back then, Genesis games were dirt cheap. I remember winning an eBay auction for 50 games for just over $50. (Seller was local, so no shipping!)
When I started my current job in 1995, there were a couple of thrift stores close enough that I could hit one or the other during lunch. There was the infamous summer where I declared I would purchase every Sega Genesis I found that was less than $5. I think I ended up with at least 10, and sold most of them later at gaming expos just to get rid of them. Literally, they were worthless.
What changed the Sega Genesis for me was an article that directly compared its capabilities to the Amiga. In my mind, the Amiga was a magical, untouchable machine and the Sega Genesis was, you know, a 16-bit console -- sure, it was better than the original NES and SMS, but on par with the Amiga? What they heck? That article inspired me to go back and look at the Genesis library with new eyes. I've appreciated it much more ever since.
What was the question? Gah.