History of video games/Platforms/NES Classic Edition

History

edit

The NES Classic and Famicom Classic both launched on either November 10th or November 11th, 2016 depending on the region.[1][2] The launch price was $59.99.[3] A victim of it's success, the system was plagued by shortages following its launch.[4]

In Japan a special Shonen Jump edition of the console was released, known as the Jump Mini this console featured a gold colored case, a customized manga themed interface, and a different selection of games.[5]

The system is often credited with starting a trend of higher end official retro consoles being released on the market.[6]

Technology

edit

The system is powered by an Allwinner R16 containing a quad core ARM Cortex A7 CPU and a Mali 400MP2 GPU.[7][3][6] The system contains 256 megabytes of DDR3L SDRAM.[8] For internal storage the system uses 512 megabytes of NAND flash storage.[3][6]

edit

NES Classic

edit

Family Computer Classic

edit

References

edit
  1. "Photos of the NES Classic Edition Launch Party at Nintendo NY Store Are Available on Business Wire's Website and Associated Press Photo Network" (in en). www.businesswire.com. 11 November 2016. https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20161111005157/en/Photos-of-the-NES-Classic-Edition-Launch-Party-at-Nintendo-NY-Store-Are-Available-on-Business-Wires-Website-and-Associated-Press-Photo-Network. 
  2. "Nintendo Classic Mini: Famicom Announced For November 10th In Japan". Siliconera. 30 September 2016. https://www.siliconera.com/nintendo-classic-mini-famicom-announced-november-10th-japan/. 
  3. a b c "Take a look inside the NES Mini". TweakTown. 4 November 2016. Retrieved 18 December 2020.
  4. Grant, Christopher (11 November 2016). "NES Classic Edition shortages prove Nintendo is either underhanded or incompetent" (in en). Polygon. https://www.polygon.com/2016/11/11/13597938/nes-classic-edition-shortage. 
  5. Machkovech, Sam (12 July 2018). "Hands-on with Nintendo’s weirdest, and maybe rarest, classic console yet" (in en-us). Ars Technica. https://arstechnica.com/gaming/2018/07/hands-on-with-nintendos-weirdest-and-maybe-rarest-classic-console-yet/. 
  6. a b c "The Mini Console Revolution, And Why Hackers Passed Them By". Hackaday. 27 August 2020. https://hackaday.com/2020/08/27/the-mini-console-revolution-and-why-hackers-passed-them-by/. 
  7. "Nintendo NES Classic is Powered by Allwinner R16 SoC, Likely Hackable". www.cnx-software.com. https://www.cnx-software.com/2016/11/08/nintendo-nes-classic-is-powered-by-allwinner-r16-soc-likely-hackable/. 
  8. "Nintendo Classic Mini has 256MB of RAM – phoneia". https://phoneia.com/en/nintendo-classic-mini-has-256mb-of-ram/.