Catalog tag
1990s
Devices released in the 1990s.
20 devices
- 1E Alcatel 1e: MediaTek MT6580M, 4 GB storage.
- Echo Pop Amazon's Echo Pop, released in 1992.
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Atari Jaguar The Atari Jaguar is a home video game console developed by Atari Corporation and released in North America in November 1993. Atari marketed it as the world's first 64-bit game system, drawing controversy as some argued that this configuration did not meet the definition of a 64-bit system. The Jaguar launched with Cybermorph as the pack-in game. A total of 63 licensed games were released for the system prior to its discontinuation in 1996. -
Atari Jaguar CD The Atari Jaguar CD is a CD-ROM peripheral for the Atari Jaguar video game console. Only 11 games were released for the Jaguar CD during its lifetime. However, previously unfinished and homebrew games have since been released. -
Game Boy Color The Game Boy Color is an 8-bit handheld game console developed by Nintendo. It was released in Japan on October 21, 1998, and in international markets the following month. Compared with the original Game Boy, the Game Boy Color features a color TFT screen instead of monochrome, a CPU running at up to twice the speed, and four times as much memory. It is backward compatible with games developed for its predecessor. The Game Boy Color was released during the fifth generation of video game consoles and competed with Bandai's Japan-only WonderSwan, SNK's Neo Geo Pocket Color, and Sega's North America-only Genesis Nomad. -
Nintendo 64 The Nintendo 64 (N64) is a home video game console developed and marketed by Nintendo. It was released in Japan on June 23, 1996, in North America on September 29, 1996, and in Europe and Australia on March 1, 1997. It was Nintendo's third major home console, following the Super Nintendo Entertainment System, and competed with Sony's PlayStation and the Sega Saturn in the fifth generation of consoles. -
Super Nintendo Entertainment System The Super Nintendo Entertainment System is a home video game console developed and marketed by Nintendo. It was released as the Super Famicom in Japan on November 21, 1990, as the Super NES in North America on August 23, 1991, and internationally throughout 1992. It was Nintendo's second programmable home console, following the Nintendo Entertainment System (NES). A fourth-generation console, the SNES primarily competed with the Sega Genesis in the console war, a fierce battle for market share in the United States and Europe. -
Nintendo Virtual Boy The Virtual Boy is a video game console developed and manufactured by Nintendo and released in Japan on July 21, 1995, and in North America on August 14, 1995. Promoted as the first system capable of rendering stereoscopic 3D graphics, it featured a red monochrome display viewed through a binocular eyepiece, with games employing a parallax effect to simulate depth. The console struggled commercially, and its limited market performance led Nintendo to discontinue production and game development in 1996, following the release of only 22 games. - Panasonic 3DO (FZ-1) Panasonic 3do: 32-bit ARM60 RISC. Released in 1993.
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Philips CD-i The Compact Disc-Interactive is a digital optical disc data storage format as well as a hardware platform, co-developed and marketed by Dutch company Philips and Japanese company Sony. It was created as an extension of CDDA and CD-ROM and specified in the Green Book specifications, co-developed by Philips and Sony, to combine audio, text and graphics. The two companies initially expected to impact the education/training, point of sale, and home entertainment industries, but the CD-i is largely remembered today for its video games. - Sega 32X Sega 32x: 2x Hitachi SH-2 (SH7095) 32-bit RISC @ 23.01 MHz. Released in 1994.
- Sega CD Sega cd: Motorola 68000 @ 12.5 MHz (16-bit). Released in 1992.
- Sega Dreamcast Sega dreamcast: Hitachi SH-4 32-bit RISC @ 200 MHz (360 MIPS, 1.4 GFLOPS). Released in 1998.
- Sega Game Gear Sega game gear: Zilog Z80 @ 3.5 MHz. Released in 1990.
- Sega Nomad Sega nomad: Motorola 68000 @ 7.61 MHz. Released in 1995.
- Sega Saturn Sega saturn: 2x Hitachi SH-2 @ 28.6 MHz (~56 MIPS). Released in 1994.
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Neo Geo AES The Neo Geo, stylized as NEO•GEO, is a video game platform released in 1990 by Japanese game company SNK Corporation. It was initially released in two ROM cartridge-based formats: an arcade system board and a home video game console. A CD-ROM-based home console iteration, the Neo Geo CD, was released in 1994. The arcade system can hold multiple cartridges that can be exchanged out, a unique feature that contrasted to the dedicated single-game arcade cabinets of its time, making it popular with arcade operators. -
Neo Geo Pocket Color The Neo Geo Pocket is a series of handheld game consoles developed and manufactured by Japanese video game company SNK between 1998 and 2001. The first model, the monochrome Neo Geo Pocket, was released in Japan in October 1998, marking SNK's entry into the handheld gaming market and competing with Nintendo's long-running Game Boy line. It was quickly superseded by the more mass-produced Neo Geo Pocket Color in 1999, a more widely produced model featuring a color display and full backward compatibility with the games for the original model. - PlayStation (PS1) Sony ps1: MIPS R3000A 32-bit RISC @ 33.8688 MHz. Released in 1994.
- Blade Force Blade Force is a 1995 third-person shooter simulation video game developed by Studio 3DO and published by The 3DO Company in North America, Europe and Japan exclusively on the 3DO format. Set on a dystopian sci-fi future in the year 2110, where the fictional city of Meggagrid has been overrun by criminals, the player is equipped with a flight suit created by scientist Dr. Franz Grubert known as the HeliPak in an attempt to overthrow the main criminal organization led by the Pitt family and bring order back to the metropolis. Its gameplay mainly consists of shooting action in third-person with six degrees of freedom using a main five-button configuration.