Game Gear:Game Gear Mods Wiki: Difference between revisions

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(Grammar Fixes & Added Link to replacement game cart PCB)
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<li> [https://everdrive.me/cartridges/edgg.html EverDrive-GG] </li>
<li> [https://everdrive.me/cartridges/edgg.html EverDrive-GG] </li>
<ul><li> [https://www.printables.com/model/163839-sega-game-gear-cartdrige-shell/files 3D Printable Shell] </li></ul>
<ul><li> [https://www.printables.com/model/163839-sega-game-gear-cartdrige-shell/files 3D Printable Shell] </li></ul>
<li><s> [[Game Gear:Otaku's Store SD Loader]] </s> </li>
<li> [https://bennvenn.myshopify.com/products/game-gear-512kbyte-cart?_pos=2&_sid=fcbe71fd3&_ss=r&variant=39721137504359 JoeyGG] </li>
<li> <s> [[Game Gear:JoeyGG]] </s> </li>
</ul>
</ul>
||<h3>Replacement Parts</h3>
||<h3>Replacement Parts</h3>

Revision as of 04:34, 13 December 2024

Game gear us-jp logo.svg Game gear eu logo.svg

Game Gear.png

The Sega Game Gear is an 8-bit handheld console from the fourth generation of video game consoles. The system launched in Japan on October 6, 1990, followed by North America and Europe during 1991. The Game Gear featured similar hardware to the Master System, but had a much larger color palette of 4,096 colors and offered true stereo sound. The system could be powered by an AC adapter or run for three to five hours on six AA batteries — a much shorter amount of time than the Game Boy's 30 hours on 4 AA batteries. An analog TV Tuner was released for the system to be able to watch television on the Game Gear, as well as a Gear to Gear Cable (VS Cable) which allowed for multiplayer gameplay using two Game Gears. Sega officially discontinued the Game Gear in early 1997, although it did see a brief rerelease in the US by distributor Majesco in 2001.