Nintendo Ends NES And SNES Production
Thanks to an anonymous reader for pointing out the news on Gamespot that Nintendo is ending production of the classic Famicom (NES) and Super Famicom (SNES) consoles. Apparently, a limited amount of AV Famicoms and SFC Jr. Super Famicoms were still being manufactured in Japan - but sadly, not any more. Also, according to Gamespot, "Nintendo will also stop its disk-rewriting services for the Famicom Disk System, a supplemental device released in 1986" - amazing that Nintendo was still allowing Disk System re-writing after almost 20 years, and that they allowed Gameboy/SNES cartridge re-writing, which also never made it outside Japan, until late 2002.
Yes. I'm a nerd. A normal person wouldn't get that worked up about a game console. :)
Learn to Play Go
yes thats probally true, I have been there (after going to Hong kong) and there, comparably to both western and HK, is no pirating. Worst I saw was Kazaa installed on one of my japaneze friends computer....
LOTS of porno, like reading a porno magazine on the subway is like acceptable....
Japan was fun....
What the hell are you talking about?
Read the fricking articles, for Christ's sake. It was a peripheral that let you write games onto special carts from kiosks in drug stores.
Read the fricking articles, for Christ's sake.
Talk about wishful thinkinging!
Fortunately, ZSNES is very much alive.. You never appreciate a games controller until you're forced to use a keyboard to play a fighting game... :P
That they were still making these at all anyway.... ah well another instituation of gaming has to come to an end :(
Slashdot - The one stop shop for procrastination
Actually, the reason that disk drives for the NES and N64 didn't make it to america was because of the rampant piracy in asia.
Also, the Famicom Disk System made the creation of unlicenced NES games all the easier, so there are a considerable number of pr0n games and such floating around.
It has always been very easy to get replacement parts for older NES and SNES systems to keep them in full working order dispite thousands of hours of play time and countles cartridge removals and insertions... until now. I suspect that with Nintendo no longer needing parts to build new systems, the manufacture of the parts will stop too. It can't hurt to order a few extra cartridge slots and other components now in case you need them in the future and they are no longer available.