This points to a lot of really interesting things. Just in case you cannot read it, the EEPROM chip has "X-MEN" written on it, the top says NINTENDO SUPER FAMICOM CARTRIDGE, the left says LoROM 16Mbit By WeLoveGame, the chip on the left has 1990 NINTENDO on it. The board itself has some strange things, attached is a picture of it. The PCB is new, so it's not a used board from the late 1990's it's not a first run version. The cartridge shell is SFC style so it won't fit in a US SNES with the tabs still intact. It's an actual newly produced cartridge, and by new I mean went straight from the warehouse to my hands. I ended up buying the X-Men vs Street Fighter game and got it in the mail today. Soon after that another guy I deal with had the same thing, and a Tekken 2 cartridge done in the same way. Strange thing about it was it was in a Japanese style SFC shell with a "legitimate" looking Japanese label, unlike the SNES style Brazilian release with the crappy label.
#Aladdin sega nomad cracked#
Hopefully have this cracked soon so you can all be as underwhelmed as I.Ī seller I had delt with in the past contacted me a few weeks ago about having an X-Men VS Street Fighter SNES cartridge for sale. The controls are awful, the physics are inconsistent, and from what I can tell the music might be original but the loop is so short it repeats after about 15 seconds. As was speculated in another thread, it's a port of the MD version to SNES, but honestly the Famicom port was way better. Then there's this weird glitch where stuff you'd normally walk over that would hurt you (spikes, hot coals) doesn't actually hurt you at all, and in fact your character slides without animating at all when walking over it. You will literally fall through the fucking floor within the first 10 seconds of the game. Much like Pocket Monster it's just a second rate port of the MD game.Īladdin 2000, where do I start on this turd? Firstly, by thanking RetrogamerX for donating his cartridge then by cursing those responsible for it's existence. Crap controls, same jerky platforming engine as all the other SNES pirates, and I'm not even going to bother to mention what sound music/FX/driver it uses. Both of these arrived today courtesy Sonik.Ī Bug's Life is a port of the MD version, has DVS Electronics on the label but they're not mentioned on the title screen.