- joes@lemmy.zipEnglish2 months
As someone who didn’t own an N64 back in the day, I’ve been really loving my Analogue 3D!
HouseWolf@pawb.socialEnglish
4 monthsI would say I would never spend that much, but then I remember my £1000 Desktop I mainly use for playing old games…
alleycat@feddit.orgEnglish
4 monthsWhat a lot of people don’t get is that this isn’t just a N64 clone, it is a FPGA copy with overclocking, 4k upscaler and crt emulation, and it supports wireless controllers (albeit just a few select models). It’s a good deal, if you don’t have any other retro consoles - then og hardware and a separate upscaler might be better.
- 4 months
I don’t have the Analogue 3D (N64), but I do have the Super NT (SNES), and while it is a pretty expensive way to play old games, it’s also one of the best in terms of accuracy and image quality. It’s basically the best SNES money can buy, so you have to really love the platform to spend that money over simply emulating on a PC.
The price is also not that bad compared to modding original hardware or buying decent upscalers. I don’t know what a HDMI modded n64 runs these days, but I remember seeing them at $600 back in the day!



