Yes, this will play all your old school Colecovision games like "Donkey Kong", "Galaxian", and "Zaxxon" in all their 16 color glory. Ben Heckendorn, creator of the NES Micro, made a custom case, tore apart an old Colecovision system, designed his own controller, and put it all together into the sleek package you see above. It features A/V outputs, an auxiliary power input, and a reflective black vinyl case with brushed aluminum accents. Unfortunately, this one-of-a-kind system was built by request and has already been sold. [Source]
9. NEStation
The NEStation is one of the most unique custom systems we've ever come across. A French modder painted his NES completely black with blue accents, created a custom vertical stand, installed four blue LEDs, and than carved in a PS2-style logo on its side. [Source]
8. The nPod
The nPod is Ben Heck's latest gaming console, featuring a 3.5-inch LCD display, custom machined case (only 41mm thick), and a rear-loading cartridge slot. It's powered by 4 AA batteries and can play any NES game. [Source]
7. Portable Sega CDX
Most of you may not remember the CDX, it combined the Sega Genesis and Sega CD into one console. SegaSonicFan's portable CDX sports a 5" display, JP/US import switch, second headphone jack, S-Video output, external controller switch, and a built-in automatic scan FM radio. It even plays 32X games.
6. Gamecube-to-Go
Gamelver spent a great deal of time constructing this portable Gamecube -- especially the case. It looks to feature external controller ports for multiplayer action, along with a pair speakers. Other specifications have not yet been released.
5. NESPlusSega
This all-in-one machine can play both Sega Genesis and NES games. The case was made from custom molded ABS plastic and features controller ports for both systems. [Source]
4. Handheld Atari Jaguar
The Jaguar was the world's first gaming system with two 32-bit processors. Unfortunately, the system met its demise in early 1996 due to poor sales. Well Dave decided to pay tribute with this portable Jaguar.
3. Sega Genesis/Mega Drive Mini
Kotomi took one of those 6-in-1 Sega TV game devices and turned it into a Genesis/Mega Drive mini, complete with cartridge slot. One potential drawback, he doesn't mention if the cartridge slot is functional -- it's an interesting project none the less. One more picture after the jump.
2. Dreamcast Portable
Dave took on an ambitous project when he created this portable Dreamcast from scratch. It features a custom designed case, 5" LCD display, and a built-in 16MB memory card. Powered by two rechargeable batteries, its good for up to 1 1/2 hours of playtime.
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