GBA Afterburner Creators Announce Stealth Link
Thanks to the double-team of PlanetGameCube and Shacknews for pointing out that the Gameboy Advance 'Afterburner' backlight creators, Triton Labs, have announced the Stealth Link GBA multiplayer adaptor. It'll allow you to play multiplayer Gameboy Advance games against your friends completely wireless, without those pesky link cables, and is due in retail stories in Q3 2003. More excellent innovation here from the people who made the GBA usable again, before Nintendo put in backlighting as standard with the Gameboy Advance SP.
...no one is going to afford to buy one of them
This seems like an interesting concept, though I would be worried about interference from other 2.4 ghz band devices.
Also, would eavesdropping be possible with this? Or cheating by transmitting false data on the same band?
My only question is how big can this possibly be? While it would be "cool" to play multiplayer on GBAs located in different rooms or across the room, you would be paying three or four times the cost of an old-fashioned link cable. I guess the best use for this would be with four-player connectivity since dealing with four cords and arranging appropriate seating for four people tethered by cords would be more troublesome. But there again you're talking about $120-160 spent between four people to get the ball rolling. You'd have to play connected games a LOT to get a decent return on your investment.
Before anyone says anything, I know that the Afterburner was a huge success. But that product gave value to EVERY GBA owner since one player or four, the screen was still lit instead of dark.
Again, though, in terms of the "cool factor" and the ambition factor, Triton certainly can't be faulted. They might just help drive Nintendo to more changes. If they succeed, I wouldn't be all that surprised to see a Gameboy Advance SPX in a year or so that integrates bluetooth right into the package.
Is this something you could hook up to a computer? I could see all sorts of neat hacks (emulator/GBA connectivity, GBA/GBA connectivity over the Internet, backup/restore of GBA save files) for a device like that.
Try not. Do or do not, there is no try.
-- Dr. Spock, stardate 2822-3.
Makes you wonder what other applications this could be used for. You have the bluetooth-adapter coming out in q4(from what i've heard) and perhaps they will both help spawn a new array of wireless applications.
Question is of course, do we really want/need to turn an excellent little gaming-platform into a multipurpose-ninja-tool? The digital camera and printer for the old gameboy was perhaps not the most brilliant products.... or?
Machines of Loving Grace
I remember when this guy said he was just doing this to help people and wasn't doing it for profit. Then he goes quiet for months because he's working on a patent. Lame.
"Gameboy Advance 'Afterburner' backlight creators"
Just to clarify. The Aterburner is NOT a backlight, it's actually a frontlight. I put one in my GBA. It is a plastic sheet that sits on top of the LCD and shines light from a couple white LEDs down onto the screen.
It really sort of bugged me that only a few months after Triton labs put all the work into developing the afterburner and packaging it, comming up with easy to follow directions for installation, etc. Nintendo decided that NOW it was possible to do what they had been swearing off for years. Which is include some sort of lighting device in their handheld systems. They claimed they wanted longer battery life over including a backlight (or frontlight). With my afterburner installed I get about 10-11 hours on two AA batteries. That's plenty long for me, especially since I can now actually see whats going on. Nintendo is taking all the credit for Triton's hard work. For that reason I swore off buying a GBA-SP. Also I don't like how the GBA-SP is shaped. That pager-esque flip top form factor just doesn't do it for me.
Maybe it's just me. Don't get me wrong, I've been a big Nintendo fan since the NES, I still have my NES and collect games for it, along with my SNES, and N64, all the way down the line. But the GBA-SP is one thing I will be avoiding.
GBA SP uses multiple, well-placed FRONT lights.
The effect is better than the 'no-lighting' on the
original GBA, but still sucks by comparison to any truly backlit LCD screen.
Just couldn't let the claim 'Nintendo put in backlighting as standard with the Gameboy Advance SP' go un-challenged.
As for this wireless link-up adapter, this Anonymous Coward says it is a useless invention which will surely ruin the company pushing it.
This makes the GBA almost cool enough to buy. I've wanted a new hand-held game unit for a while. The last one I owned was the original extra-bulky GameBoy. I'm glad I've passed on most that came up since. The only thing holding me back is hearing here about the sony handheld.
My 2 GBAs with the Afterburner can only use the link cables when they have fresh charged batteries. Won't the wireless link use more power causing even more issues with connectivity? With all these add-ons with no additional power, limits will be reached.
You can lose something that is loose, so tighten the loose item so you don't lose it.
The GBA SP actually has a forward light not a back light...
I hope someone hacks together a way to play over the internet with this, i'd like to try out the four swords but i don't know anyone around here with a gba =/ would be pretty spiffy to be able to play the multiplayer gmaes online as none of the emulators support it