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PC Engine (TurboGrafx-16) emulators

1,166 bytes added, 11:15, 17 June 2017
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[[File:PCengine.jpg|thumb|The PC Engine (Japanese Model)]]The '''[[gametech:TurboGrafx-16/PC Engine|PC Engine]]''' (PCE) was a 16-bit system released by [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nec NEC] in 1990, as a collaboration between Hudson Soft and NEC. It is known saw a limited US release as the '''[[gametech:TurboGrafx-16/PC Engine|TurboGrafx-16]]''' and support dwindled soon afterwards. Europe only got imported power-converted versions of either the US (in Spain, UK) or Japanese models (in other Benelux regions outside of Japan). PC Engine CD (PC-CD) was a CD addonIt could run HuCard cartridges.
The '''PC Engine 2CD''' (PCE2PC-CD) , also known as the '''TurboGrafx-CD''' in the US, was an upgraded version of add-on to the PC Engine system that could run CD-based games, much like the Sega CD but better supported in Japan. The '''PC Engine Duo''', also play known as the '''Turbo-Duo''' in the US, was another hardware revision that combined the original PCE and PC-CD hardware in one unit with more RAM, as yet another failed attempt to relaunch the failing console in the West.  The '''PC Engine GT''', or the '''Turbo-Express''' in the US, was a very rare handheld model of the original PCE gameshardware, in the same vein as the Sega Nomad (a portable Sega Genesis / Megadrive). It did include some exclusive features like the TurboLink multiplayer feature (used in a flight sim called ''Falcon'') but wasn't widely supported. In  The system was to receive an enhanced model with true 16-bit hardware back in 1990, originally called the west it '''PC Engine 2'''. It was known eventually rushed to the market only in Japan as the '''PC Engine SuperGrafx''' lacking much of the promised features, and was a commercial failure. Only It was backwards compatible, and only 7 exclusive games were released for it.
==Emulators==
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