Here's Why The SEGA Game Gear Was Ahead Of Its Time

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  • Опубликовано: 24 июл 2024
  • The SEGA Game Gear was released back in 1991 and at the time competed with the tremendously successful Nintendo Gameboy. Despite the system being stacked with technology, the sacrifices from a quality of life standpoint really hurt the system with it going through batteries constantly and overall being a bit large to take with you. Still the Game Gear gave us a look at playing console games on the go even back in the early 90s.
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    #SEGA #GameGear #Techwave
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Комментарии • 1,1 тыс.

  • @drift180x
    @drift180x 5 лет назад +17

    SEGA was always that company that pushed technology and was very innovative, major kudos to SEGA. They still make lots of fun games to this day.

  • @MrMario2011
    @MrMario2011 5 лет назад +41

    On the battery bit, from what I heard most parents did indeed get tired of buying tons of batteries for this thing. Someone I know grew up with this system and when he stumbled upon one in a game shop he said "Oh, I remember this thing! So many hours spent plugged into the wall playing it..."
    AC adapter when batteries weren't available!

    • @MrSupersonic2012
      @MrSupersonic2012 3 года назад +5

      I mean that AC adapter is a life saver. Most people who play games aren't exactly moving around. Normally when I'm playing a portable game device, whether it's my Gameboy, Gamegear, or Switch I'm at home on the couch or on my bed. The only time battery life is ever an issue is if I'm on a trip.

    • @PlasticCogLiquid
      @PlasticCogLiquid 2 года назад +1

      That's what I did

    • @Agouti23
      @Agouti23 2 года назад

      I had an AC adapter. they'd get loose in the plug, and I had to get another. I also had a clip on rechargable battery that you plugged onto the ac adaptor hole. you didn't have the official game gear case for your games and accessories? also, this had multiplayer via a cord. I also had a sonic the hedgehog backpack with a gamegear holder on the back.

    • @DanBray1991
      @DanBray1991 Год назад

      @@rockapartie I remember having rechargeable batteries but they were a massive rarity (and had much shorter life) for most of the 90's. I remember my friends being amazed I had chargeable batteries when I got my first gameboy colour + pokemon yellow circa 1998

    • @brettknoss486
      @brettknoss486 2 месяца назад

      Mains power was/is readily avaliable. The GameBoy used a lot of batteries too.

  • @kellokabana2399
    @kellokabana2399 5 лет назад +147

    I loved my gamegear but in all honesty I spent most of my time playing next to a wall outlet because it took 6 batteries and it wasn’t the most portable device due to size and weight. My parents couldn’t afford 6 Duracells/Energizers per play session so I had to make due with low cost rechargeable batteries. I would get between a half hour to an hour of play of time on road trips. I eventually got a car adapter but again, not the most comfortable playing experience when you have wires hanging. Whenever my parents moved their elbows in the car it would often unplug the cord and I would lose all my progress.
    On a positive note, my gamegear always attracted the attention of other school kids which made me some friends so I’m thankful for that.

    • @CommodoreFan64
      @CommodoreFan64 5 лет назад +14

      Sounds like we had similar experiences with our GameGears back in the day, but eventually my mother got me the official SEGA battery pack that has a belt clip, and my father(divorce parents) not knowing my mother had got the SEGA ver. a few weeks later for my B-day got me the Doc's battery pack that goes under the GameGear and uses the screw hole to stay attached, so I would use the Doc battery pack, and WideGear lol.

    • @kellokabana2399
      @kellokabana2399 5 лет назад +12

      referral madness well I basically did the same to kids who had backyard swimming pools so I guess there’s a little give and take lol.

    • @johnny2x484
      @johnny2x484 5 лет назад +5

      I mean when your a kid a lot of times you'd make friends and those friends let you come over and play games or use the pool whatever I know for a fact because my parents didn't like or want me playing games never got me any consoles I had to go play at other kids houses. That is until later when I convinced them a Game Boy would get me active, haha suckers! But yeah as a kid you kind of have to use and get used.

    • @DvdXploitr
      @DvdXploitr 5 лет назад +9

      thats how kids were....they became friends with other kids so they could experience something new. That's how I became friends with my neighbors...they had a Sega Genesis and I had a Super Nintendo...then later on, I had PlayStation and they had Saturn...we'd go to each others houses, stay up all night playing games that we couldn't play at home. Had a friend that lived down the road that had a PlayStation with a modchip with almost the entire PlayStation game library...ANYTHING that was released, he had a copy of it....(even the Mary Kate & Ashley game)

    • @ressljs
      @ressljs 5 лет назад +1

      I had an Atari Lynx, I had some rechargeable batteries, but back then they weren't that good and they only worked for about 1.5 hours. But still, that came in handy for occasions when I HAD to have it on the go. Mostly, I plugged it into the wall. But honestly, that was fine. I was mostly playing it in my bedroom (where there was no TV) and then I left for college, where I also had no TV.

  • @Anriku_Reacts
    @Anriku_Reacts 5 лет назад +76

    Ah. The good old days...batteries and magnifying accessories.

    • @johnny2x484
      @johnny2x484 5 лет назад

      I love that literally it just takes a few tweaks and a new screen and you basically have a significantly better product.
      That's the thing I love about retro products they only get better with age.

    • @rashidisw
      @rashidisw 5 лет назад

      And tweak the batteries compartment so it can use voltage-compatible rechargeable & replaceable batteries (not necessary have to be in the size of two AA-sized batteries-3x).
      The mod's cost are worth it.

  • @PresRonnieRaygun
    @PresRonnieRaygun 5 лет назад +68

    11 year old me got this xmas morn, burned through my first 6 batteries in the first 2 hrs, so I trudged through the snow to the only store open, the gas station, and bought 6 more batteries. Proceeded to burn through those during the next 2 hrs, blowing 12 batteries before 11am. The next day I bought an AC adapter at radio shack.

    • @maceomillions2192
      @maceomillions2192 5 лет назад +1

      Daniel McMahon lol

    • @rooty
      @rooty 5 лет назад +1

      Haha I got mine for my birthday. Before I even played it me and my dad went out for a little while. By the time we got back, my brother had drained all the batteries. Straight back out to buy an AC adapter. Possibly the thing never saw another set of AAs lol.

    • @TechTokOffical
      @TechTokOffical 3 года назад +1

      Right and then the "battery thing" wasn't a thing

  • @Icaras
    @Icaras 5 лет назад +4

    As a kid, being that my parents would leave me and my sister in the car when they'd go into shops, I used to wish I had a game gear...not so much for the games (tho those would have been great) but for the tv tuner. The idea of a portable tv....wow, that was mindblowing to kid me.

  • @carlcouture1023
    @carlcouture1023 5 лет назад +30

    The battery life was an issue to be sure, but you have to remember, the primary buyers of these handhelds were kids asking their parents to buy them. The kids weren't reading technical reviews and had no concept of battery life or screen quality. It was black and white vs color. However, the Game Boy had two HUGE advantages that Sega had no prayer against. Mario and Tetris. Mario mania was still sweeping the nation and Tetris was THE killer app. But let's remove that from the equation. Little Billy is howling for a Game Gear or Game Boy for Christmas. You flip open the Sears catalog. One costs $90, the other costs $150. You notice the cheaper one has Mario going for it. So which one does Little Billy get for Christmas?

    • @MFTony727
      @MFTony727 5 лет назад +5

      As a kid I remember playing a little game on my Game Gear that was very similar to Tetris, I believe it was called "Collumns", at the time I honestly didn't know the difference lol.

    • @tayooo1000
      @tayooo1000 4 года назад +3

      @@MFTony727 i was going to mention that game cause it was awesome

    • @Kailo7777
      @Kailo7777 3 года назад +3

      Whose little Billy?

    • @bigstv15
      @bigstv15 3 года назад +1

      @@MFTony727 haha I had columns for my sega genesis!

    • @winnetouch
      @winnetouch 2 года назад +2

      @@MFTony727 Columns is Tetris like, but the falling blocks are basically all they have in common. It's currently the only game I have for the system.

  • @richard-davies
    @richard-davies 2 года назад +4

    I remember having the official Sega battery back accessory for the Game Gear, worked pretty well.

  • @AlienFrequency
    @AlienFrequency 5 лет назад +257

    Buying batteries every other day? No man, smart kids bought rechargeable batteries.

    • @Kalvinjj
      @Kalvinjj 5 лет назад +35

      True, but... They weren't all THAT common on the early 90s, I do remember using them through the early 2000s.

    • @AlienFrequency
      @AlienFrequency 5 лет назад +34

      I mean, I was a kid in the 90’s. I don’t recall having trouble finding rechargable batteries, but maybe they were more expensive? I had a lot of electronics and a lot of recharable batteries, personally.

    • @Kalvinjj
      @Kalvinjj 5 лет назад +7

      @@AlienFrequency Could be just less common, RC cars did usually have Ni-Cd batteries indeed, Ni-Cd were common enough but weren't just as popular as they got on early 2000s (also would last a heck lot less, but as light as crappy zinc batteries).
      Dunno when the Ni-MHs got popular, at 1st they were like only on more expensive stuff, could be just they were uncommon around here too

    • @AlienFrequency
      @AlienFrequency 5 лет назад +7

      Yeah I think they were less common, more expensive, and different technology (Nicad vs Lithium). I'm not a battery expert, but it seems to me that lithium batteries are a new-ish thing that came about maybe in the early 2000's? I just remember my folks buying me rechargeable batteries in the 90's, because I'd burn through standard batteries so fast. So, personally, I always had them available to me.

    • @fusionspace175
      @fusionspace175 5 лет назад +13

      Rechargeable batteries were way more expensive and they wore out over time with diminishing returns on each charge. Given the time needed to charge them it really wasn't worth it. So many downsides. You would use up the charge on one set with constant use before another set was done charging, so at some point you're going to want regular batteries anyway. Add in the cost of the charger itself and it's a fools game.

  • @Heathmanscoolstuff
    @Heathmanscoolstuff 5 лет назад +43

    I bought one of these cheap, but it was in awful condition. It had a worm in the screen. Still worked, but every game you played was Earthworm Jim.

    • @bernadettavarley
      @bernadettavarley 5 лет назад +9

      Wait... is "A worm" some tech term I don't know, or are you meaning _a real freaking worm?_

    • @Heathmanscoolstuff
      @Heathmanscoolstuff 5 лет назад +9

      Real worm. Could’ve also been a fake worn I suppose.

    • @bernadettavarley
      @bernadettavarley 5 лет назад +7

      _Oh my gosh, that's disgusting! lol_

    • @danmackintosh6325
      @danmackintosh6325 5 лет назад +1

      And I thought I had it bad with a bit of dust trapped between the LCD and the white backing panel!

    • @chaddeez8446
      @chaddeez8446 5 лет назад +2

      Did you eat it?

  • @ketchupkatsup9805
    @ketchupkatsup9805 5 лет назад +17

    It was essentially a Master System on the go - and that was pretty badass. Add to that a radio and TV receiver and you have a terrific portable system. The only downside was that horrific battery life.

    • @AlexOjideagu2
      @AlexOjideagu2 5 лет назад +1

      The PC Engine GT was a Pc Engine on the go which was way more badass

    • @ketchupkatsup9805
      @ketchupkatsup9805 5 лет назад

      @@AlexOjideagu2 now i wish we got that worldwide! I would love to play on a PC Engine...never played one before

    • @AlexOjideagu2
      @AlexOjideagu2 5 лет назад +1

      I'm from the UK so didn't get it either, but I knew about it, it was shown in UK gaming magazines. I had an Atari Lynx though which was more powerful than the Game Gear hardware wise.

    • @mattmaverick703
      @mattmaverick703 2 года назад +1

      Game Gear was technically better and more powerful than the old Master System from 85. Yes alot of the games were ported over to it, but most notably the Sonic games! You can tell Sonic is faster on the Game Gear and the colors are better too on the Game Gear as well! To me it was more like a portable Genesis before I knew of the Nomad. Give the Master System credit though, for being 2 yrs newer than the NES that came out in 83 the Master System seemed better far as its graphics ECT. For me it was The Genesis that stole the show and still steals it for me today.

  • @Ndihrkop
    @Ndihrkop 5 лет назад +4

    This channel is my absolute favorite. You are so clear and knowledgeable. I still have my Game Gear at my parents. I had a huge pack that I kept my games in Power Rangers, some Olympics game, Sonic, Shaq Fu, etc. I remember the battery wouldn't even last to my grandparents (about 3 hours). I remember my uncle having a TV Tuner. SEGA was way ahead of its time.

  • @Real_Sgt_Tom
    @Real_Sgt_Tom 5 лет назад +55

    Now I want to see the Sega NOMAD tear down!! lol

    • @chungusmogus8832
      @chungusmogus8832 5 лет назад +5

      The switch before the switch

    • @boostfrog
      @boostfrog 5 лет назад +7

      The Nomad is awesome for exactly that reason. It's Sega saying "fuck it" and building something completely overpowered for it's time and therefore totally impractical and stupid. It was pretty much the Dodge Hellcat Demon of the videogame world. "Lets build this overpowered stupid thing that nobody else is ballsy/stupid enough to try just because we can" haha.

    • @blakewilliams5627
      @blakewilliams5627 5 лет назад +2

      BullFrog I think the Nomad’s biggest problem is Sega launched it too early. Sega should have waited until 99-00 to release it, & built it with better more energy efficient technology. Imagine if every Sega nomad came w/ an adapter that was basically just a Sega Genesis cartridge w/ a slot for smaller nomad cartridges so, you can take out the adapter & play Sega Genesis games or leave it in & play nomad games on smaller game gear sized cartridges. You can even put the nomad adapter into a Sega genesis & play brand new nomad games on a Sega Genesis. Sega’s biggest problem was probably a lack of imagination when it came to their hardware.

    • @mhobin12
      @mhobin12 5 лет назад +2

      I miss my nomad

    • @johnny2x484
      @johnny2x484 5 лет назад +2

      @@mhobin12
      Same here pretty sure I sold it back in the early 2000's I sold a lot of things right before the retro craze came along and made things highly more valuable. I have a lot of regrets but luckily I still have a lot of good stuff I didn't sell.

  • @sig861
    @sig861 5 лет назад +24

    I loved my game gear I had the TV adaptor . And I hid under my bed on a school night and watched tremors haha

    • @Elegies22
      @Elegies22 5 лет назад +3

      Tremors was 👌🏿👌🏻

    • @sig861
      @sig861 5 лет назад +1

      It was so bad it was good unlike the sequels they were just bad

  • @arkanoid77
    @arkanoid77 5 лет назад +18

    As a Game Boy owner I felt very envious when I discovered the GG for the first time. But the feeling completely vanished when I realized you could play max 1 hour with rechargable batteries. I could play almost 10 hours with 4 rechargeable batteries on the Game Boy.. That was the precise moment I realized how clever was Nintendo's "less is more" rule for the first time!

    • @gamesandplanes3984
      @gamesandplanes3984 Год назад

      Lol. "max one hour"?
      Don't be an idiot.

    • @MrZillas
      @MrZillas 7 месяцев назад

      And where did you use the GameBoy most time? Inside or outside? Inside, correct.

  • @Spaxer
    @Spaxer 5 лет назад +167

    I frickin love this channel. It quickly became my favorite.

    • @TheMmiguel002
      @TheMmiguel002 5 лет назад +5

      Spaxer same here i always watch his videos everyday.

    • @johnny2x484
      @johnny2x484 5 лет назад +2

      I love a good technological autopsy. But seriously breaking Tech down and looking at all it's workings has always fascinated me.

    • @joser51o
      @joser51o 5 лет назад +1

      I played mine connected to the power brick

    • @MenfisRetroSpace
      @MenfisRetroSpace 5 лет назад +3

      Just to let you know that this guy doesn't know much. The Atary Lynx was the first color backlit display and with 16BiT ...The GameGear doesnt deserve any credits and this video as well!

  • @OccultBeast
    @OccultBeast 5 лет назад +13

    I had both a Gameboy Color and a Game Gear as a child, and while my GBC was easier to tote around to my Grandparents' house and grocery shopping trips with my mom, I loved playing on the Game Gear at home. We actually had an AC adapter for ours, because I remember spending most of my time on the sofa near the outlet playing Sonic & Sonic 2, Lion King, and Mickey's Castle of Illusion. We owned an NES, but aside from that, the Game Gear was literally the best looking system I owned until I got my hands on a Playstation. Sure, the Game Gear ate AA batteries for breakfast, but damn was it nice to play a game in full colour like that.

    • @StraightcheD
      @StraightcheD 5 лет назад

      I can relate to that. Later on in the late 90s I got a TV tuner cartridge for it and used to watch TV on it... lol

    • @AntoRetroGamer
      @AntoRetroGamer 5 лет назад

      Honestly, the Game Gear was a great option if you didn't already have the Master System.

  • @EPS5000
    @EPS5000 5 лет назад +5

    8:07 actually the Gameboy Micro was the first Gameboy to have a backlit screen. The original SP had a frontlit screen, the revised SP with a backlit screen didn’t come out until about a week after the Micro. A lot of people confuse which came first, since the releases were so close together, but the Micro was released first.

    • @codo8584
      @codo8584 3 года назад +1

      @DejaVoodooDoll Yep that was the first, but it was only released in Japan, shortly before the Color came out, so it's no surprise it's not counted

    • @sillygoober___123
      @sillygoober___123 Год назад

      Um actually 🤓☝️

  • @superex1118
    @superex1118 5 лет назад +38

    What about the Atari Lynx? It had 16 bit visuals and 3d polygons. In 1989......

    • @superex1118
      @superex1118 5 лет назад +5

      Tbf the gamegear has a decent recognition by many to be a color game system. Its just with such heavy advantages come a price as well as poor attraction to third party which meant these systems wouldnt be sold well. Plus. The system wasnt very reliable either. The capaciters dont last very long meaning youd be lucky to find a system thats used that still works

    • @danmackintosh6325
      @danmackintosh6325 5 лет назад

      And that, would really have been Epyc... *rolls eyes* I'll get my coat.

    • @KuraIthys
      @KuraIthys 5 лет назад +2

      @@superex1118 Capacitor problems are easily fixed. One of the easiest fixes in all of electronics in fact.
      That is, assuming the capacitors haven't leaked and corroded the circuit board.
      Of course, even that is beyond most people, but just keep that in mind if you run across one with capacitor problems - even an electronics amateur with mediocre soldering skills should be able to fix something if capacitors are the only thing wrong with it.

    • @mystman1210
      @mystman1210 5 лет назад +2

      That's what I'm thinking. I was blown away when I learned about the Lynx a few years ago, I couldn't believe how good the games looked considering the year it released!

    • @jimmjimms
      @jimmjimms 3 года назад

      ...did it tho?

  • @Comascape
    @Comascape 5 лет назад +3

    I always wanted a Game Gear growing up. My cousin had one, but the batteries were always dead. Now that I'm an adult, i found one for under $10 and started collecting. It really is an amazing little system.

  • @ryankim0726
    @ryankim0726 5 лет назад +101

    Too ahead of time since it ate up like 6 batteries in less than 5 hours

    • @shuntarofurukawa5577
      @shuntarofurukawa5577 5 лет назад +7

      Wasn't it 3 hours

    • @CommodoreFan64
      @CommodoreFan64 5 лет назад +5

      I owned a GameGear when they first launched, and 6 hours was a dream in normal use, as SEGA got 6 hours out of a unit by turning it on with no game inserted, no user input, and the volume at it's lowest. the most I would get on Average was 3 - 4hrs out of a set of good batteries, and with the official SEGA battery pack when it was new maybe 4 1/2 hours, and about the same with an aftermarket Doc's branded one.

    • @OriginalBadRobotz
      @OriginalBadRobotz 5 лет назад +6

      More like 2 hours

    • @CommodoreFan64
      @CommodoreFan64 5 лет назад

      Heavy Palmz With some cheaper alkaline batteries that were not as well made, and Heavy Duty Batteries 2 - 2 1/2 hours of use was about right for the Game Game, but on good alkaline batteries like Energizers, or Duracells 3 - 4 hrs really was the average for a set.

    • @RedSunFX
      @RedSunFX 5 лет назад +8

      Just Squid well, if we look at early mobile phones, you could use them for one week without charging. Modern mobile phones on the other hand run out of power before you can even look. The Game Gear was also ahead of its time in that aspect xD

  • @Fenir8
    @Fenir8 5 лет назад +7

    I had the rechargeable battery for this thing.. it was pretty much required with the battery life of this thing. But it let you plug it in to charge like your talking about.. Added size to the unit but.. eliminated that problem a bit.

    • @StraightcheD
      @StraightcheD 5 лет назад +2

      The one that sticks out from the battery compartment right. That thing was heavy...

    • @alvallac2171
      @alvallac2171 3 года назад +1

      *you're (contraction of "YOU aRE")
      "Your" is for possession.

  • @TheKyGuy
    @TheKyGuy 5 лет назад +1

    I remember getting my Game Gear for my birthday during my childhood back in the 90s. I also remember many friends and family members having one. I even remember at least one friend having a battery backup for the device.
    Whenever I used mine, I would take a crapload of batteries with me. I have also used this third-party multi-plug device that I think my parents got from Radio Shack; we originally got it for the Super Nintendo. I do remember changing the plug and voltage on the kit and playing my Game Gear during road trips.

  • @racooninvasion
    @racooninvasion 5 лет назад +1

    Great video! I was onboard the submarine USS Topeka when this came out, my mom got it for me as a gift to stay busy on long, boring patrols. I can't tell you how awesome it was to have that cutting edge tech onboard a US fast attcack sub loaded with cutting edge tech.

  • @inceptional
    @inceptional 5 лет назад +3

    The Game Gear really is an impressive system for its time, but the size and battery life were probably two of the biggest barriers to it even achieving the success it maybe deserved. The physical system, other than its size, still actually looks pretty slick today imo.

    • @AntoRetroGamer
      @AntoRetroGamer 5 лет назад

      It definitely looked better, but then the Game Boy Color was released.

  • @bonesjackson81
    @bonesjackson81 5 лет назад +6

    Sega always reached to push things ahead. Cost them everything

  • @railmacher1303
    @railmacher1303 5 лет назад +1

    So fond of the Game Gear back then, the portability aspect and brightly lit screen drew me and my brothers in. Really had so much fun back then, eventually the screen turned white and we never replaced it, opting for later consoles such as Saturn and Playstation.

  • @RichardHartness
    @RichardHartness 5 лет назад +1

    I loved my Gameboy and Game Gear as a kid! Both were awesome. I don't think I ever played my Game Gear with AA's, though, and if I did it was with rechargeables. I quickly bought the battery pack and 90% of the time is was plugged into the wall or a cigarette lighter jack for continual power.

  • @ExiILe00
    @ExiILe00 5 лет назад +6

    The future is 20 years ago young man!

  • @Jokir4754
    @Jokir4754 5 лет назад +17

    Turbo Express smoked the Game Gear. NEC was 5 years ahead of the Nomad.

    • @andyukmonkey
      @andyukmonkey 5 лет назад +5

      Even the Lynx was miles ahead.

    • @jessethomas1169
      @jessethomas1169 5 лет назад +2

      And the TurboExpress came out first, and played the actual TurboGrafx games!

    • @altonstory8332
      @altonstory8332 5 лет назад +1

      Yup, the Turbo Express was the Rolls Royce of portables.

    • @somanymods
      @somanymods 5 лет назад +1

      Yup. I wanted that so bad

    • @sloppynyuszi
      @sloppynyuszi 5 лет назад

      I traded in My game Gear with 20 games for a PC engine GT with 3 games. One of those games was Street Fighter 2 Champion Edition. Mind blown and I could ignore that I had to make Street Fighter work with 2 buttons.

  • @morteneisner5360
    @morteneisner5360 5 лет назад +1

    I remember being like 8 years old and that a kid from my neighbourhood had a game gear. It was constantly empty, as rechargeable batteries had less capacity and it was charging for a day and playing for 1 hour.

  • @mattmaverick703
    @mattmaverick703 2 года назад +1

    I have the Majesco made version of the Sega Game Gear and mine is in near excellent condition! This is the one to hunt for as this version didn't suffer from bad capacitors as the old Sega made ones did. These back in 2000 were simply known as the Ames Department Store editions alongside the Sega Genesis model 3 which was also made by Majesco.

  • @catvideojogos
    @catvideojogos 5 лет назад +5

    Wait wait wait ... the Game Gear have a AC/ adapter , that is the same as the one for Megadrive/ Genesis ! DID YOU KNOW THAT ?

    • @sendbitcoin
      @sendbitcoin 5 лет назад

      :O i didnt.. fml (20years too late)

  • @JesseAndMike
    @JesseAndMike 5 лет назад +11

    Used to play the Game Gear every once in a while but didn't realize the battery life was so poor! Liked as always! :D

  • @bleachgarage
    @bleachgarage 5 лет назад +1

    As a kid, I had to buy my own batteries. One of the first things I got for the GameBoy was the AC power cable. I also bought a GameGear brand new and on the same day, picked up the Sega rechargeable battery pack. It worked great back then.

  • @AdamAve93
    @AdamAve93 5 лет назад +1

    I loved that little thing. I had the wall outlet and the tv antenna add on. Sadly it took way too many batteries. But I did get to use it on my tv here and there.

  • @cocaine_is_a_hell_of_drug765
    @cocaine_is_a_hell_of_drug765 5 лет назад +5

    Battery life and price is the reason why gameboy dominated.
    If I remember correctly you could also watch TV on the game gear.

    • @PhoenixSplash
      @PhoenixSplash 5 лет назад +1

      Marketing too.

    • @GardevoirBoy1991
      @GardevoirBoy1991 5 лет назад +1

      @@PhoenixSplash In other words, subtract the lack of color, Game Boy conquered every sin the Game Gear had. It looks like the Sega Game Gear was nothing more than a Game Boy ripoff.

  • @TimboSlice083
    @TimboSlice083 5 лет назад +8

    I just used rechargeable AA batteries.

    • @sloppynyuszi
      @sloppynyuszi 4 года назад +1

      TimboSlice083 I used those too, but they lasted an hour at best and had to charge for ages

    • @Bob-et3vc
      @Bob-et3vc 4 года назад

      Me too, but one feature he failed to mention and possibly the biggest flaw is that you couldn't save. Meaning you had to complete the game in one sitting. I remember getting to the final level of Sonic on a road trip where I couldn't plug in and my battery crashed... I had to start from the very beginning

    • @princeleo276
      @princeleo276 4 года назад

      @@Bob-et3vc Lots of GG games used a password system- at a certain point in the game it would give you a code to write down. Then you can shut it off, start the game back up and enter at the password screen and start where you left off. Not everything had this tho. Some games you just had to beat straight up lol... GG Sonic 1 was one of those games..

  • @Runescythe9852
    @Runescythe9852 5 лет назад +1

    A couple of things that always stood out to me was the fact that this thing had full color screens and could be played in the dark compared to the gameboy's black and green screens and had to have a light source nearby to play.

  • @dmomintz
    @dmomintz 5 лет назад +1

    We had rechargeable AA batteries growing up, battery life was only really an issue on long flights, car rides... It still works fine too.

  • @itubeutubewealltube1
    @itubeutubewealltube1 5 лет назад +34

    you know this guy never owned this in the nineties,, because anyone who did used rechargable batteries. I knew no one who kept buying batteries every other day. That is just an absolutely ridiculous statement.

    • @OMaMYdG
      @OMaMYdG 5 лет назад +12

      That or people got an AC adapter. People seem to never mention that.

    • @ketchupkatsup9805
      @ketchupkatsup9805 5 лет назад +6

      I took it out with me once and never did it again. This was a system you would only play plugged in and it was terrific for it, especially if there wasn't a spare TV in your house for a proper console.

    • @BabySkinCondom
      @BabySkinCondom 5 лет назад +1

      i love the part where he claims you "had to use batteries" while pointing the power cord port directly at the camera

    • @-cynicpsychic-7275
      @-cynicpsychic-7275 5 лет назад +1

      Obviously you didn't own it either bc they sold an ac adapter that plugged into the wall. Why piss with an hours worth of play off rechargeable's when you could play indefinitely?

    • @Rattrap007
      @Rattrap007 5 лет назад

      I had the rechargeable battery pack accessory.

  • @bsheehan09
    @bsheehan09 5 лет назад +3

    You could play this while it was plugged in like the Switch.

  • @TheBigScat
    @TheBigScat 5 лет назад +1

    This is a fantastic video. So much information packed into 13 minutes. I never really knew much about this console; now I know a lot about it.

  • @stevenclark2188
    @stevenclark2188 5 лет назад +1

    As an example of just HOW relatively advanced the Game Gear was: the Game Gear literally had the first color LCD display I, (and I suspect many others) had ever seen in person.

  • @OxKing
    @OxKing 5 лет назад +28

    But Atari Lynx was released a Year earlier.

    • @ressljs
      @ressljs 5 лет назад +9

      Yeah, Lynx was more advanced, two years earlier and then there was the Turbo Express. Sorry, as a piece of hardware, Game Gear really didn't look special at all when it launched.

    • @daveb2987
      @daveb2987 5 лет назад +5

      The Lynx was pretty awesome, and you could play opposite hands if need be.

    • @TheUnlovedhomie
      @TheUnlovedhomie 5 лет назад +2

      took the words right out of my mouth. can we see the turbo express guts now please ?

    • @MenfisRetroSpace
      @MenfisRetroSpace 5 лет назад +3

      This guy doesnt know much! How the he** the GG deserve credits over the Lynx, with his first color display lit and 16 bit as well!

    • @hector4470
      @hector4470 5 лет назад +2

      MenfisRetroSpace It’s not that serious they both deserve praise as both where ahead of their times...

  • @BocVel
    @BocVel 5 лет назад +32

    SEGA:. Can we copystrike Nintendo Switch?

    • @BocVel
      @BocVel 5 лет назад +3

      @referral madness who are they? I don't recall that name

    • @johnny2x484
      @johnny2x484 5 лет назад +2

      Oh I'd love to see a tear down of a turbo graphic 16 handheld
      I only knew one kid who ever had one he had rich-ass Parents. That thing was insanely expensive I mean I think it was $350 bucks at the time which was amazing for console graphics on the go but I think the battery life again was terrible I wonder if you could fix the backlighting like The Game Gear here cuz I bet it would become highly valuable if you did.

  • @cinnamondan4984
    @cinnamondan4984 5 лет назад

    Thanks! I was really happy to see this topic and I loved the content upon watching it.

  • @3DJapan
    @3DJapan 5 лет назад +1

    I loved my Game Gear but hated the battery life. I usually just kept it plugged in while I played. I can actually remember going to places with my older sister and asking the business owners if I could use their electric outlet, which was a very strange thing to ask back then, I got some very odd looks. These days they probably wouldn't think twice if you asked to use an outlet.

  • @michaelmay9728
    @michaelmay9728 5 лет назад +8

    Don’t forget the Atari Linkx, I had both the Game Gear and the Atari as wet as the Sega Nomad

    • @AandNvg
      @AandNvg 5 лет назад +4

      Actually there a lot of great Lynx games.

  • @fernandosepulveda8748
    @fernandosepulveda8748 5 лет назад +29

    Lol it’s funny how he says back in the 90s we used batteries. And now Xbox users are the only ones still using batteries

    • @retrosoul8770
      @retrosoul8770 5 лет назад +1

      Haha that's true, but at least it's only 2 batteries and they last for days unlike this piece of junk.

    • @shuntarofurukawa5577
      @shuntarofurukawa5577 5 лет назад +3

      @@retrosoul8770 but it's not as good as built in rehargables. But at least they last a good while

    • @aschraub9897
      @aschraub9897 5 лет назад +5

      That's why you get a pair of nice rechargeable AAs and in my case I have 2 pairs so I can charge the ones that run out after I put the freshly charged ones in. They last quite a while too and take just as long as it takes to charge a ps4 controller to charge. I really should look into a new charger tho mines from like 10 years ago. It;s still pretty nice but maybe they have faster charging ones now. I also have that charger that used to be advertised on TV as charging non-rechargeable AAs and it works from what I remember I think it's called Mighty Charger.

    • @johnny2x484
      @johnny2x484 5 лет назад +4

      @Javier m
      Correct and let me tell you I would much prefer being able to switch out some Double A's as opposed to having to screw around with charging cables. actually I find it to be the best feature of the XBone controller, for those unaware the touch pad on the PS4 controller constantly draws power as it has to be on at all times to take any possible inputs. Sadly it draws so much that it drastically reduces battery life.

    • @shuntarofurukawa5577
      @shuntarofurukawa5577 5 лет назад +1

      @@johnny2x484 it isn't as bad with the switch though. Since my switch is in the dock when not being used my batteries have never ran out

  • @Dagoth_Ur_1
    @Dagoth_Ur_1 Год назад +1

    This handheld still is amazing.
    I think the issue with it was it's price though, it was much more advanced than the black and green screen Gameboy, could player master system and even had a TV tuner. But the price I'm sure sure went up after launch.
    You don't need batteries for this, I never used batteries in my youth, it came with a power adapter.

  • @VideoStalker00
    @VideoStalker00 5 лет назад +1

    I miss my Game Gear, that was part of my childhood!! I remember I had the battery banks that also worked as comfort grip with an adapter and largely increased the battery life!!

  • @FatherManus
    @FatherManus 5 лет назад +4

    I wanted a Gameboy to play Pokemon and Tetris. I got the Game Gear instead. I was a very disappointed child.

    • @-cynicpsychic-7275
      @-cynicpsychic-7275 5 лет назад

      Why it was a thousand times better? Stfu

    • @AntoRetroGamer
      @AntoRetroGamer 5 лет назад

      I was always more partial to Columns over Tetris personally.

  • @MichaelMashpotato
    @MichaelMashpotato 5 лет назад +3

    One reason is they didn’t make batteries powerful enough to support the Game Gear😂

  • @MacTX
    @MacTX 5 лет назад +1

    Back in the mid 90's, my aunt bought me a game gear for my birthday and I had it for a couple weeks before deciding to return it and get something else. I remember the screen quality was one of the main reasons.

  • @johnodaz1273
    @johnodaz1273 5 лет назад +1

    Awesome tech wave video Jon(SW). Really nice taking apart of the Sega Game Gear. This is why I have never really been big on Handhelds cuz of the Gameboy n Game Gear. Both had rubbish small screens, awkward controls, running out of batteries was very annoying as a kid, couldn't play it on the TV and the games never looked as good as the Consoles but I would still say guys that Handheld gaming has probably been the most important thing too happen in gaming and it's all thanks too the Nintendo Gameboy n Sega Game Gear for forward thinking.

  • @golgoth7600
    @golgoth7600 5 лет назад +6

    Pretty sure we had nickel cadmium batteries in the 90s

    • @Kit_Bear
      @Kit_Bear 5 лет назад

      Yeah but they were crap.

  • @hoov66.6
    @hoov66.6 5 лет назад +5

    SEGA will rise again like a phoenix! Well you can dream.

    • @readit2day
      @readit2day 5 лет назад

      It's already happening, apparently in partnership with Google.

  • @smileyeagle1021
    @smileyeagle1021 5 лет назад +1

    The Game Gear was absolutely perfect for road trips... we had the car adapter to plug it into a car outlet, it would last all day on that outlet, no need for replacement batteries, and it was so much more comfortable to hold than a Gameboy and the screen was easier to see both when it was bright during the day and at night you couldn't even see the Gameboy.

  • @legendaryanime9947
    @legendaryanime9947 5 лет назад +1

    But they came with a AC adapter for using at home, only really needed the batteries for when you'd be out and about. Long car journeys.
    I loved the old tv adapter, was great for when I'd go fishing with my dad when I was young

  • @retrosoul8770
    @retrosoul8770 5 лет назад +4

    This is sadly yet another example of Sega's 90s incompetence. It's a shame because I have tremendous appreciation for the Genesis in every way (love it slightly more than Snes), but everything else Sega did just buried themselves alive (s-cd, 32x, sega channel, saturn, dc, literally everything else was foolishly executed).
    Regarding the GGear, the second the engineers realized in 1990-91 that they couldn't create a viable power solution the project should have been postponed until the tech matured or just cancel the back-light altogether. But Sega was always GO GO GO rush it out of door asap anyway with no conscious thought to consumer concern/interest or practicality through simple common sense. (And then they did it again with the NOMAD!) But yeah great vid Spawn!

    • @johnny2x484
      @johnny2x484 5 лет назад +1

      @referral madness
      I prefer to say an amazing forward-thinking company that did some profoundly retarded things.
      It's a shame management always managed to screw them. Truly a failure from the top down.

    • @SakuraAvalon
      @SakuraAvalon 5 лет назад +2

      Didn't help the Japanese branch was so salty, that they sabotaged the Western Branch.
      "No, go ahead and make the 32X. We've got nothing planned that would get in the way."
      *32X reaching launch date*
      "So, we'd just like to announce the Sega Saturn. A true 32bit gaming console."

    • @BrySkye
      @BrySkye 5 лет назад +2

      The narrative has been a little skewed towards that, especially in recent years, but it's a little silly to think its quite *that* simple (it's also inaccurate. Japan initially pushed for the 32X as a bit of a knee jerk reaction to the Jaguar).
      But it's worth noting that some people in higher positions in Sega of America didn't think the Saturn was required either. The Mega-Drive/Genesis install base was such that some of SoA seriously believed people would always just stick to the cheaper 16-bit machine that had more games, and those games would always be cheaper than the next gen competition.
      That was also a doomed approach, and kind of strangely naive given all those NES owners that jumped to either the Mega-Drive or Super Nintendo. People will always move onto the next thing sooner or later, despite the price gap, and it generally only takes a couple of years before the returns on previous generation hardware no longer justify continued development for it.

    • @ThouArtOfWar0724
      @ThouArtOfWar0724 5 лет назад

      It wasn't incompetent on their behalf at all with the Game Gear. They just figured people would buy batteries often as people waste money on much dumber things every day. The hardware itself was amazing for the time I had one and waa blown away with its graphics.

    • @ggn3
      @ggn3 5 лет назад +1

      In the case of the Game Gear, I'd say that issue was more due to the technology limitations of the time period as the video argues. The color and backlit screen ate up more battery life for the Game Gear than the Game Boy's monochrome display, thus making the latter more ideal for handheld gaming for longer periods of time and less costly for buying batteries. Rechargable batteries weren't in wide usage until at least a decade later, so that effected things with the reliability of the Game Gear as a handheld game system.
      As for all the additional Genesis add-ons and systems made during the mid-90s, that seemed like a mix of both Sega overextending itself and Sega's Japan and American branches not being on good terms with one another by that point. By the mid-90s, Sega of Japan wanted to have more control over marketing operations in America and pushed Sega of America into following their actions from the Saturn's abrupt early release when third-party distributors wouldn't have their games ready until later in 1995 to reducing support for the Genesis shortly afterward in spite of the console still being popular with consumers. In addition, Sega of America was not made aware of the Saturn's development from Sega Japan until just as the 32X add-on was ready for launch in America. Plus, having all those consoles in market by 1995 showed Sega had no clue what kind of direction it wished to take itself and showed consumers that they overextended their hand with what they were doing.

  • @lay-lowandsmash1519
    @lay-lowandsmash1519 5 лет назад +16

    Sega...go back to being awesome
    Multiplat all games
    And be adventurous again
    Good luck I will buy all games if you do better. playstation burned us by messing with accounts they don't own.
    Make an available PC xbox Nintendo everything everywhere
    Peace

  • @emiel333
    @emiel333 5 лет назад +1

    Great video, SpawnWave. I used rechargeable AA batteries for my GameGear (also, for my Game Boy) It was hard when the batteries were in the charger because I couldn't play haha. Remembering playing Sonic before going to school. Awesome, just awesome.

  • @herroldj
    @herroldj 5 лет назад +1

    I never needed that magnifier with my game gear and when I was home I had the ac adapter and when we were out I have to oval shaped battery pack and also a tv tuner it was pretty sweet. The screw hole at the back was for the first party rechargeable battery pack kind of like the battery case for the nomad

  • @boiz9552
    @boiz9552 5 лет назад +67

    Look at where sega now releasing games On their ex competitor consoles😂😂😂

    • @boiz9552
      @boiz9552 5 лет назад +4

      @referral madness
      They probably wanted some more cash

    • @whiteknight5100
      @whiteknight5100 5 лет назад +8

      BOI Z Same place Sony is going to be soon..

    • @JA-ug7wq
      @JA-ug7wq 5 лет назад +13

      It's a shame, too. They were very creative and innovative back in the day, an unafraid to take a fun idea to production.

    • @boiz9552
      @boiz9552 5 лет назад +7

      @@whiteknight5100
      How,when they pay companies to do their exclusives. They probably don't even own most of them

    • @whiteknight5100
      @whiteknight5100 5 лет назад +2

      @@boiz9552 Lol. Good point. Sony ain't going no where

  • @voidofbeeswax
    @voidofbeeswax 5 лет назад +3

    Meow!

  • @GameplayCrush
    @GameplayCrush 5 лет назад +1

    I spent my childhood in the 90s with rechargeable batteries, heck i still use that same charger today xD

  • @charlescid
    @charlescid 5 лет назад

    Love that background! Always wanted to have a room full of my console boxes but my kids will always find a way to mess them up.

  • @Juice2Fifty
    @Juice2Fifty 5 лет назад +6

    The Game Gear was amazing at the time! As a kid, batteries were too damn expensive so I used the AC adaptor exclusively. In terms of display and sound, it murdered the Gameboy. Playing SMS games handheld was ahead of its time as well! You really have to put yourself in the shoes of a 8 year old kid, playing a handheld color system on Christmas of ‘90! The Gameboy seemed so far behind!

    • @-cynicpsychic-7275
      @-cynicpsychic-7275 5 лет назад +1

      Justin Bacio
      Um it didnt come out until 91 bc that's the Christmas my brother received his. Have a video to prove it.

    • @Juice2Fifty
      @Juice2Fifty 5 лет назад +1

      * falsefrag * You didn’t catch me in a lie, just an error. You can keep your video. I’m sure it’s legit 🙄

  • @dogg-paws
    @dogg-paws 5 лет назад +18

    No one has ever defeated Nintendo when it comes to handheld gaming. Remember that.

    • @theverybigblackman
      @theverybigblackman 5 лет назад +18

      So? Even as a nintendo fanboy, it was nice having interesting alternates like the gamegear and PSP.

    • @derangel9143
      @derangel9143 5 лет назад +3

      Apple and Google both did. Handheld gaming is still big, but smartphones have run away with a big chunk of that market.

    • @mrbisshie
      @mrbisshie 5 лет назад +10

      That's sad. I fucking love my 3DS, but I wish Sony did a better job with the Vita. Didn't fuck us over with those dumb overpriced Vita cards, and actually posed a challenge to the 3DS, forcing Nintendo to compete better. Competition is always a good thing.

    • @dogg-paws
      @dogg-paws 5 лет назад +2

      That's like saying Sony defeated Nintendo because the PS4 outsold the 3DS. Doesn't work like that, Derangel.

    • @RunicSigils
      @RunicSigils 5 лет назад +3

      @@derangel9143 smartphone games really aren't games.
      They're extortionate banking simulators.

  • @slick147
    @slick147 5 лет назад +2

    The PC engine / turbo grafx handheld was revolutionary as well.

    • @jackson5116
      @jackson5116 5 лет назад

      that was actually the first ever system to allow home console gaming on the go.

  • @nurmweb
    @nurmweb 5 лет назад +1

    I only bought batteries for mine a few times, until I bought a universal power supply for it. I used a power supply to play the thing for the most part, since I never needed to play it while away from electricity and the battery life was short. People act like the only way to play it was with batteries.

  • @1970scout800
    @1970scout800 5 лет назад +4

    Game gear is cool

  • @Ranstone
    @Ranstone 5 лет назад +5

    And one day, we'll all look back and say:
    "Remember when Microsoft made consoles?"
    "Who remembers when Sony was a thing?"
    "Guys, remember the time before cloud processing?"
    "Who cares about gaming! The zambies are coming! Grab your M4!"

  • @nodnarb3540
    @nodnarb3540 5 лет назад

    I had a game gear and I remember I only had a couple mainline sonic games and sonic pinball. Impressed yours is in such good condition!

  • @SKBottom
    @SKBottom 2 года назад

    Does anyone know where you can find one of the upgraded versions with LED lights?

  • @ogorangeduck
    @ogorangeduck 5 лет назад +19

    gbc is better
    nothing beats playing dkc for 10 hours on 2 AAs

    • @styxxhs8048
      @styxxhs8048 5 лет назад

      orange duck yea i think when this came out the only gameboy was the original brick, that just had 2 colors.. a yellowish weird color and black! Lol.. so it was definitely ahead of its time.. if only it had a battery adapter.. i cant remember if it came with an A/C adapter or not..

    • @Stricnigne41
      @Stricnigne41 5 лет назад

      orange duck You mean GBA right? DKC never came out for the GBC. Or are you talking about Donkey Kong Land for the original GB?

    • @ogorangeduck
      @ogorangeduck 5 лет назад +3

      No, there is a port for the GBC (only DKC1 though).

    • @hector4470
      @hector4470 5 лет назад

      orange duck It’s called DK Land instead of Country.

  • @matthewbryant2972
    @matthewbryant2972 5 лет назад +1

    This is one of those weird ones where, I remember the GameGear being more popular than the GameBoy however, I think it was, everyone owned a Game Boy, but got tired of it and enough had Game Gear that when people hung out on trips, you just passed the game gear around. I was the only one out with a game boy for a few years. Then the batteries got too expensive and finding an outlet was necessary and people went back to the game boy or we stopped playing portable games or something. I remember it being a success...

  • @michaelbft9827
    @michaelbft9827 5 лет назад

    The portable tv antenna attachment was cool too. You could watch tv on the go

  • @stephendid
    @stephendid 3 года назад

    I traveled up to scotland from wales and with the car adapater this was a godsend 10 hours stuck in one place and no batteries usage.

  • @artchic528
    @artchic528 5 лет назад

    My siblings and I had a game gear AND a master system growing up. It was beyond cool taking our master system cartridges with us on the long road trips we used to take and playing them in the car via the game gear. I also fondly remember playing the Jurassic Park and Sonic Chaos on it. Needless to say, being a battery hog, we got that battery pack you mentioned. Much more cost effective in the long run though a completely absurd concept by today's standards.
    This video was a massive trip down memory lane and full of nostalgia. Especially when you showed the device playing Golden Axe. That game was super popular with my brothers and I. Thanks so much for making this video. I'm going to keep smiling for the rest of the day now.

  • @fluffibuni8663
    @fluffibuni8663 5 лет назад

    I was a home micro gamer in the 1980s, and when my eldest son was born in 1987 my opportunities for gaming dipped, and when my younger son was born in 1990, gaming time at home was almost non-existent. So I thought I'd look at getting a handheld system I could take to work and play during lunchtimes, and obviously be able to whip out quickly to play at home when an opportunity allowed. I investigated the Game Boy, Game Gear and Atari Lynx and picked up a Game Gear ... it was fabulous and I still love the system and it's games now. I also picked up a Master System and Master Gear adapter to play Master System games on the TV or on the Game Gear. While I can appreciate many of the GameBoy's strengths, all of them were negated by the experiences offered on the Game Gear, which stayed my handheld of choice until I bought a GBA SP :-)

  • @oldmateadz
    @oldmateadz 3 года назад

    When I was a kid, I had a box of rechargeable batteries and the TV Tuner adapter. A group of us used to sit in the school library and watch daytime TV haha. Good times... I miss the 90s.

  • @ShinryuZensen
    @ShinryuZensen 3 года назад

    My GG has a broken contrast wheel. It came of when I dropped it back then.
    I wonder if anyone knows where to find the component I need to fix it? I can't seem to find it anywhere unless I get an already broken down GG......

  • @thesixthgeneration6573
    @thesixthgeneration6573 5 лет назад

    Found myself not watching as much of your content lately. This is the first video I've watched in a while. Well done!

  • @Zemu8
    @Zemu8 5 лет назад

    The craziest add-on was the analog TV tuner TV antenna thing

  • @jong2359
    @jong2359 5 лет назад +1

    No kid, in this things hayday, was running off batteries. You would have had your power adapter with you everywhere you go. You left the car outlet adapter in the car, and you carried your AC adapter with you everywhere you went. Most people I knew had the NiCad extended/rechargeable battery packs, too.

    • @FeelingShred
      @FeelingShred 5 лет назад

      Just like people carry their phone chargers everywhere they go nowadays. So, indeed, ahead of its time, waaay ahead.

  • @GCJACK83
    @GCJACK83 5 лет назад

    Large backlit color screen, stereo sound when headphones were used, tv adapter (optional), but was a monster when using batteries unless you had the AC adapter and rechargeable battery pack.

  • @SpecialXperienZ
    @SpecialXperienZ 5 лет назад +1

    Man I remember many good times with the GameGear! I had the super wide gear and the battery pack.

  • @Donkehy-puncharello
    @Donkehy-puncharello 5 лет назад +1

    Loved my gamegear. I was in 5th grade and had the insight to buy rechargeable batteries,also the gamegear came with a power adapter that you plugged in the wall socket. So in short batteries weren't really much an issue.

  • @ErvTV
    @ErvTV 2 года назад

    You're being very generous with battery life there my friend. I remember getting my game gear for Christmas at my mom's house, putting columns into it and playing it for less than three hours before it died. I was very sad teenager, cuz Mom only bought one set of batteries for it.

  • @tayooo1000
    @tayooo1000 4 года назад

    i like how the screen magnifier looks like a old crt monitor

  • @onlineamiga
    @onlineamiga 5 лет назад

    Great video :) My friend had a game gear and I just had to have one too when I was a kid. The battery life wasn't so much of an issue as made out tho. We used rechargeable batteries on it, which we'd put in a battery charger. (and yeah it took all night to charge them!) but it gave some more play again and although they didnt last as long as full batteries it did work. Also we would plug in where we could. So when at a friend or relatives house we would just plug in and play. Still ultra portable, way easier than carting a master system and a chunky crt tv on my bicycle!!
    Fond memories of the tv tuner too. What power we had back then! We could tune into TV so could go and watch what we wanted rather than enduring the news in the livnig room! In the UK we only had 4 channels of over the air TV and where I lived the signal sucked.. but it was good enough! Of course now everything is digital broadcast, the TV tuner is useless. But I'd love to get myself a game gear again :)

  • @felishiakat
    @felishiakat 5 лет назад +1

    I had one of those. I was so pissed when dad traded my Game Boy in for this. Still a nice console, but it was way too bulky and you have to have a lifetime supply of batteries or find a cord you can use and save batteries. He liked doing that. He took my NES and a whole library of games and traded it in for the Super NES and a handful of games. Then he bought me the Sony stuff a PS 1 and the PS 2. man I miss those now.

  • @necron99.aka-sammyboy92
    @necron99.aka-sammyboy92 5 лет назад

    I like the boxes as wall art. I can finally take all my boxes out of the garage n place them on the walls. Tho, I will display them without any gaps, it’ll just be wall paper basically. Great idea bro!

  • @tripevil
    @tripevil 5 лет назад

    such a classic Spawn Wave vid, this is why you are great man! sub fo life!

  • @SWOL
    @SWOL Год назад

    Was there an ac adapter for the game gear? I coulda sworn there was one

  • @MetalJT24
    @MetalJT24 5 лет назад

    Wow i remember playing that on the bus going to school, Playing the Switch now reminds me of the Game Gear.

  • @randomdrifter
    @randomdrifter 5 лет назад

    That's interesting
    The capacitors were one thing, but never knew that they used a full on fluorescent tube setup for the screen
    Learnt something new! Thanks! :)

    • @MrMarinus18
      @MrMarinus18 5 лет назад

      well, what else could they have used?
      Colorless LCD's were hideously expensive. The only cheap ones were red which is why Nintendo's virtual boy uses an all red display.

  • @illiteratethug3305
    @illiteratethug3305 5 лет назад

    I had one and found if you plugged it in for an hour, then pulled the charger out mid game, it somehow kept working for another 15 mins