also, it seems weird that a Russian fairy tale would involve killing slimes, Konek-Gorbunok might be some kind of Monster World clone... or a hack of one
also, it seems weird that a Russian fairy tale would involve killing slimes, Konek-Gorbunok might be some kind of Monster World clone... or a hack of one
Awesome, the shitty Pac Man game is evidently the arcade version of Wait and See.
Wow...Soviet games...I never would have thought...
Did Russia have any exclusive home game systems? I know theat clones appeared and they played Euro and FC NES games and such, but I'd love to read more about Soviet games. I feel like I may as well be looking at videogames from Mars.
These are just so...I dunno...Russian. Or maybe even anti-Soviet (NYET! VIDEOGAMES FOR CAPITALIST PIG ONLY! GET BACK TO WORK AND SERVING MOTHER RUSSIA!), I dunno. The make me l0l anyway.
Apparently they cost 15 kopecks per play - which could buy you several loaves of bread in that era. Seems like a lavish expense.
The games I'd really love to play the most are the submarine games, and the firetruck game (they have a steering wheel and a light gun built into the same unit... how cool is that!)
Konek-Gorbunok is emulated by MAME, if you want to give it a try...
Actually, as I was reading through that article all I could think about was 'I hope to God the MAME team is working on these...'
actually it's the only one. when other ones would get dumped, they will be emulated too
DarkTetsuya wrote:
handofg0d wrote:
I highly doubt there were soviet era consoles...
I'm sure there may have been pirate Famicoms, I'd bet on it even.
DT
not sure when the dandy (russian famiclone) was distributed... it could have been after '89
nor I remember other russian consoles that old.
anyway, there were russian computers back in mid80 (both original ones and clones of western computers like spectrum & apple 2) and computers were produced in almost any eastern europe country...
mainly intended for work, but don't forget where tetris comes from
Joined: 24 Sep 2015 Posts: 8 Location: Middle Russia
Posted: Fri Sep 25, 2015 6:41 am Post subject:
handofg0d wrote:
DarkTetsuya wrote:
I'm sure there may have been pirate Famicoms, I'd bet on it even.
I meant original russian consoles - famiclones for sure. Computers - absolutely. But soviet original gaming consoles? No way.
Let me answer your question: in USSR, as far as i know, there were no from-scratch-original home gaming systems. Since the TV set itself was a damn expensive thing (it costed twice as a salary of an regular office worker), evolution of home gaming was really slow.
There were some Electronika portable handheld devices, that was ripped off from Nintendo Game and Watch. Those were popular as hell, and not really pricey.
After Spectrum ZX first came to USSR, it was met with huge popularity! It was so popular, that government made speccy-clones made completely on a russian electronic parts and processors. It may be, that Speccy was the first ever USSR's home gaming console.
And just after that, Dendy happened. Some guys estabilished a tradeline with Taiwan, to produce a bootleg FC. It was made with nice quality, and most of those consoles are still in working condition.
Joined: 30 Nov 2003 Posts: 323 Location: Doritos Inc.
Posted: Fri Sep 25, 2015 6:49 am Post subject:
Thanks for that information, PolyFX. I knew that the Soviet government also produced clones of another British computer,the BBC Electron.Or was it the Micro? Good choice, the Speccy,as it was cheap and very fun to code for,as my friends tell me.
I'm sure there may have been pirate Famicoms, I'd bet on it even.
I meant original russian consoles - famiclones for sure. Computers - absolutely. But soviet original gaming consoles? No way.
Let me answer your question: in USSR, as far as i know, there were no from-scratch-original home gaming systems. Since the TV set itself was a damn expensive thing (it costed twice as a salary of an regular office worker), evolution of home gaming was really slow.
There were some Electronika portable handheld devices, that was ripped off from Nintendo Game and Watch. Those were popular as hell, and not really pricey.
After Spectrum ZX first came to USSR, it was met with huge popularity! It was so popular, that government made speccy-clones made completely on a russian electronic parts and processors. It may be, that Speccy was the first ever USSR's home gaming console.
And just after that, Dendy happened. Some guys estabilished a tradeline with Taiwan, to produce a bootleg FC. It was made with nice quality, and most of those consoles are still in working condition.
Wow, well thank you for the reply! I forget how it came about but I think I saw that russian arcade article surface again so I was kinda thinking about that, and then I got the notify that there was a reply to this thread, so interesting timing I suppose.
I do remember hearing about the Dendy Famicom system, as I expected it's a bootleg system... probably only half surprised that those consoles still work, Nintendo's stuff is always built to last, so a bootleg system based on one of theirs still being around... well I guess that just means they learned from the best!
Joined: 24 Sep 2015 Posts: 8 Location: Middle Russia
Posted: Sat Sep 26, 2015 8:11 am Post subject:
DarkTetsuya wrote:
PolyFX wrote:
handofg0d wrote:
DarkTetsuya wrote:
I'm sure there may have been pirate Famicoms, I'd bet on it even.
I meant original russian consoles - famiclones for sure. Computers - absolutely. But soviet original gaming consoles? No way.
Let me answer your question: in USSR, as far as i know, there were no from-scratch-original home gaming systems. Since the TV set itself was a damn expensive thing (it costed twice as a salary of an regular office worker), evolution of home gaming was really slow.
There were some Electronika portable handheld devices, that was ripped off from Nintendo Game and Watch. Those were popular as hell, and not really pricey.
After Spectrum ZX first came to USSR, it was met with huge popularity! It was so popular, that government made speccy-clones made completely on a russian electronic parts and processors. It may be, that Speccy was the first ever USSR's home gaming console.
And just after that, Dendy happened. Some guys estabilished a tradeline with Taiwan, to produce a bootleg FC. It was made with nice quality, and most of those consoles are still in working condition.
Wow, well thank you for the reply! I forget how it came about but I think I saw that russian arcade article surface again so I was kinda thinking about that, and then I got the notify that there was a reply to this thread, so interesting timing I suppose.
I do remember hearing about the Dendy Famicom system, as I expected it's a bootleg system... probably only half surprised that those consoles still work, Nintendo's stuff is always built to last, so a bootleg system based on one of theirs still being around... well I guess that just means they learned from the best!
Actually, Dendy was really a bootleg - as far as i know, they all made up on NOAC architecture, rather than western motherboard arch. Taiwanese technicians poured black epoxy tar on the crystals. Aside from chip PCB, there were just 2 small pieces that carried joypads and RCA video and audio outputs. This compilation allows console to be almost indestructible - i've seen myself as some guys took battered Dendy from dumpster, and after a small soldering the damn thing worked!
Joined: 24 Sep 2015 Posts: 8 Location: Middle Russia
Posted: Sat Sep 26, 2015 8:16 am Post subject:
Wonderbutt wrote:
Thanks for that information, PolyFX. I knew that the Soviet government also produced clones of another British computer,the BBC Electron.Or was it the Micro? Good choice, the Speccy,as it was cheap and very fun to code for,as my friends tell me.
Russians really liked ZX Spectrum for its circuit simplicity - a lot of engineering students made their little shops, where they soldered bootleg versions and sold them for acceptable money.
Also, there were a lot of custom versions of Speccy's firmware. Mostly, they were just translated versions of standart software, but sometimes people created amazing compilations of professional software!
Also, i forgot to mention - japanese MSX systems were popular as hell too. Since it was relatively cheap and easily reverse-engineered, MSX were used as a gaming consoles.
I'm sure there may have been pirate Famicoms, I'd bet on it even.
I meant original russian consoles - famiclones for sure. Computers - absolutely. But soviet original gaming consoles? No way.
Let me answer your question: in USSR, as far as i know, there were no from-scratch-original home gaming systems. Since the TV set itself was a damn expensive thing (it costed twice as a salary of an regular office worker), evolution of home gaming was really slow.
There were some Electronika portable handheld devices, that was ripped off from Nintendo Game and Watch. Those were popular as hell, and not really pricey.
After Spectrum ZX first came to USSR, it was met with huge popularity! It was so popular, that government made speccy-clones made completely on a russian electronic parts and processors. It may be, that Speccy was the first ever USSR's home gaming console.
And just after that, Dendy happened. Some guys estabilished a tradeline with Taiwan, to produce a bootleg FC. It was made with nice quality, and most of those consoles are still in working condition.
Wow, well thank you for the reply! I forget how it came about but I think I saw that russian arcade article surface again so I was kinda thinking about that, and then I got the notify that there was a reply to this thread, so interesting timing I suppose.
I do remember hearing about the Dendy Famicom system, as I expected it's a bootleg system... probably only half surprised that those consoles still work, Nintendo's stuff is always built to last, so a bootleg system based on one of theirs still being around... well I guess that just means they learned from the best!
Actually, Dendy was really a bootleg - as far as i know, they all made up on NOAC architecture, rather than western motherboard arch. Taiwanese technicians poured black epoxy tar on the crystals. Aside from chip PCB, there were just 2 small pieces that carried joypads and RCA video and audio outputs. This compilation allows console to be almost indestructible - i've seen myself as some guys took battered Dendy from dumpster, and after a small soldering the damn thing worked!
Wow that's pretty impressive! NOACs, huh? I wonder how the quality compares to a real famicom, as I know some of those clone systems weren't quite 100% accurate (I have a 76K-in-1 N64 pad I picked up randomly years ago that probably still works, but indeed some of the graphics and sounds are off somewhat.)
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