Changes

Jump to navigation Jump to search

Game Boy/Game Boy Color emulators

No change in size, 15:21, 30 October 2018
Changed "They would both by" to "They would both be."
Nintendo released a peripheral for the [[Super Nintendo emulators|Super Nintendo Entertainment System]] called [[wikipedia:Super Game Boy|Super Game Boy]] in 1994, which was modelled like a cartridge but included its own cartridge slot for Game Boy games, as well as the hardware needed to translate the games. Many Game Boy emulators offer at least some of the special features it included, such as added borders, colorization, custom button mappings, and other features. It was possible to link, but without the external port, as well as errors in the CPU, it would not be feasible to the end user; these issues would later be corrected in the Japan-exclusive Super Game Boy 2.
The Game Boy's successor, the [[wikipedia:Game Boy Color|Game Boy Color]] (GBC), was released in 1998. It was named such from its color screen, but it also had a larger memory size and a double-clocked CPU. The hardware similarities allow cross-compatibility between the two platforms and they are often treated as one. They would both by be succeeded by the backward-compatible [[Game Boy Advance emulators|Game Boy Advance]].
==Emulators==
Anonymous user

Navigation menu