Famicom. Those controllers. Also it's not fucking massive.
>>2760380I'm curious. Why did you have a famicom way back then? Did you go to Japan or something?
>>2760318>I love my twin famicom because it doesn't go a funny color after some years.That's because it's already a funny color.
The twin is still neat though.
>>2760796My LoZ cart has the original battery and still works too. Not sure how much longer, but it does work at the moment.
It's one of the gold carts, if that matters.
>>2782162>top loaderHaving had a top loader, a NES, and a Famicom, the famicom wins. Top loader comes in second, and Box NES last. I love my box NES to death, but it does not look good at all.
>>2762321I modified player 1 to have a longer controller by cutting the end off a NES controller wire, cutting the end off a famicom controller wire, swapping the red and yellow wires on the NES controller PCB, and soldering the famicom internal connector to the clipped NES controller wire end. Swapped the NES board into the famicom controller shell and voila, a long cable.
Player 2 you're SOL on though, unless you use a japanese site called
tea4two.co.jp that sells 6 foot wired controllers. The microphone calls for an extra wire on the controller cable.
>>2762340I still fail to see how the twin famicom is a 'beautiful thing' or such. It looks far more like fisher price gear than a normal Famicom.
Gotta love the functionality though. I'll give you that.
>>2762363>In the 80's not knowing to send it to nintendo for service>today not knowing you can swap a rubber pad in from a NES controller to fix a famicom controller if you are brave enough to remove six screws>>2762647That's the joke. Replacing a car when it runs out of oil is equivalent to replacing a famicom when the control pad sticks (Mine still hasn't btw - and none of my NES ones have either).