It’s a bird, it’s a plane, it’s Super Cassette Vision #Gaming #Vintage
The Epoch Cassette Vision was a moderate success. But in 1983, that all ended, when Nintendo and Sega released new consoles, which had more advanced hardware that allowed for better graphics and games stored on ROM. Nicole Express takes a look:
Epoch went from dominating the cartridge-based game market in Japan to a distant third practically overnight. But it’s not like they were unaware of the issue with the µPD777 they had tied themselves to. In 1984, Epoch launched their last, best hope at regaining their video game success. Imagine, if you will, a cassette vision: but super.
The Super Cassette Vision surprises from the top corner of the box. That’s right; this is the first known video game console that actually advertised the capability of RGB output. Sure, computers like the Fujitsu FM-8 had it before, but this is an era where neither the Super Cassette Vision nor neither of its competitors at the time even had AV output.
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