Nope what it comes with your stuck withis there a way to add some new games/delete the existing ones from this NES mini Chinese clone?
All these famiclones have the games on a single chip. You could potentially replace the chip if you have the soldering skill.is there a way to add some new games/delete the existing ones from this NES mini Chinese clone?
Oooh, interesting findings.Hi everyone
I took have one of these types of clones (COOLBABY Family Computer System,) and like many of you are curious to see what the hell we can do with these besides the damned shovelware and cheap reprograms. Well so far with my hot air gun I was able to get my chip off the board. The board reads 5L256-A1. The chip that's attached to the board looks like whomever made it sanded off the information on the chip itself. But after looking at the pin out I'm pretty convinced that you could program a PicoPi! I'm starting to scratch the surface but I'm thinking that we can get these cheapy NES clones to work in our favor. I just gotta try to trace the pin outs of both.
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Here's a bit of an update: Here's one of those Retro gaming handhelds everyone got for Xmas. Notice anything?? Very similar and the plus: the Retro handheld chips info wasn't sanded off! The chip is a Samsung K5L2731CAA-D770 ULE098XYQ. I may sacrifice this one as well and might desolder the board with the assumed flash and see if anything is hidden under it
https://baike.baidu.com/tashuo/browse/content?id=b35c4763c394090a433cc8e2Hi everyone
I took have one of these types of clones (COOLBABY Family Computer System,) and like many of you are curious to see what the hell we can do with these besides the damned shovelware and cheap reprograms. Well so far with my hot air gun I was able to get my chip off the board. The board reads 5L256-A1. The chip that's attached to the board looks like whomever made it sanded off the information on the chip itself. But after looking at the pin out I'm pretty convinced that you could program a PicoPi! I'm starting to scratch the surface but I'm thinking that we can get these cheapy NES clones to work in our favor. I just gotta try to trace the pin outs of both.
Post automatically merged:
Here's a bit of an update: Here's one of those Retro gaming handhelds everyone got for Xmas. Notice anything?? Very similar and the plus: the Retro handheld chips info wasn't sanded off! The chip is a Samsung K5L2731CAA-D770 ULE098XYQ. I may sacrifice this one as well and might desolder the board with the assumed flash and see if anything is hidden under it
Quiet a few similarities. Wonder why the went with two boards as opposed to the one?
I did notice that on AliExpress and I thought that looked pretty epic, despite it using similar components for the Dendy with its CPU and PPU.Or if you want a three-figure expensive alternative, I saw some kind of new custom Famicom on AliExpress, with HD VGA output and stuff. Not sure if it was using original ICs from a real Famicom, but there were definitely multiple separate chips on the custom board.
It's an FPGA clone with the NES SPU attached to it.Or if you want a three-figure expensive alternative, I saw some kind of new custom Famicom on AliExpress, with HD VGA output and stuff. Not sure if it was using original ICs from a real Famicom, but there were definitely multiple separate chips on the custom board.
Oh nice, that one looks fun too, but the thing I saw earlier was around half the price and mentioned being an alternative to one of those. Can't find it immediately...It's an FPGA clone with the NES SPU attached to it.
For anyone curious or with deep pockets, this is what we're talking about: https://www.aliexpress.us/item/3256804221492793.html
Yep, I have one of these and it looks the same as those pics on the inside..Hi everyone
I took have one of these types of clones (COOLBABY Family Computer System,) and like many of you are curious to see what the hell we can do with these besides the damned shovelware and cheap reprograms. Well so far with my hot air gun I was able to get my chip off the board. The board reads 5L256-A1. The chip that's attached to the board looks like whomever made it sanded off the information on the chip itself. But after looking at the pin out I'm pretty convinced that you could program a PicoPi! I'm starting to scratch the surface but I'm thinking that we can get these cheapy NES clones to work in our favor. I just gotta try to trace the pin outs of both.
Post automatically merged:
Here's a bit of an update: Here's one of those Retro gaming handhelds everyone got for Xmas. Notice anything?? Very similar and the plus: the Retro handheld chips info wasn't sanded off! The chip is a Samsung K5L2731CAA-D770 ULE098XYQ. I may sacrifice this one as well and might desolder the board with the assumed flash and see if anything is hidden under it