What Should Beginners Know About The NES?
What Should Beginners Know About The NES?
To continue in the RetroGaming 101 Series, I would like to know what you think beginners should know about the NES.
You can look at my Dreamcast 101 piece to get an idea of what I'm looking for.
http://www.racketboy.com/retro/2007/02/ ... guide.html
I'm not a big NES expert, so there are probably some of you that know some little tidbits that I'm kinda fuzzy on.
Let me know what you think.
Feel free to contribute sentences or paragraphs -- anything is greatly appreciated!
You can look at my Dreamcast 101 piece to get an idea of what I'm looking for.
http://www.racketboy.com/retro/2007/02/ ... guide.html
I'm not a big NES expert, so there are probably some of you that know some little tidbits that I'm kinda fuzzy on.
Let me know what you think.
Feel free to contribute sentences or paragraphs -- anything is greatly appreciated!
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- Pullmyfinger
- Next-Gen
- Posts: 1470
- Joined: Sat Jan 28, 2006 12:49 pm
- Location: Orange County
- Contact:
There are many, many things that escape my memory, I will probably update later, but this will get things started, feel free to add things or correct me.
Must haves:
Megaman series
Mike Tyson's Punch Out!! (not the Mr. Sandman version)
Zelda series
SMB series
Contra series
Ninja Gaiden series
GIJoe series
Kirby's Adventure
Batman (if you like it, try Kabuki Quantum Fighter)
Final Fantasy
Crystalis
Other interesting games:
River City Ransom
Super Dodge Ball
Nintendo World Cup
Little Nemo
Shatterhand
Dragon Warrior
Journey to Silius
Metal Gear
Interesting translated ROMs:
Sweet Home
Final Fantasy III
Interesting Prototypes and unreleased games for emulation:
Batman (Different cutscenes, etc)
California Raisins
Earthbound
Maniac Mansion (uncensored)
Interesting Accesories:
Game Genie (mostly for debug and weird stuff than cheating)
Game Action Replay (gives you SaveState function I have yet to figure out entirely)
JoyCard Sansui SSS (great controller, famicom themed, turbo and simulated stereo on headphones)
NES Advantage (haven't used mine in years, but some people like them a lot)
ROB (Crappy but gives you bragging rights)
Cleaning Kit (avoid the blinking!)
Tips and mods:
USE A/V output for better video
You can disconnect the lockout chip to use PAL games and (supposedly) improve compatibility
SNES controllers can be rewired to work on it
Games are cheaper than their virtual console counterparts most of the time
Some old games have a Famicom adaptor, but a standalone adaptor is way better
Can be overclocked rather easily
Second version does not support A/V output without a mod
Must haves:
Megaman series
Mike Tyson's Punch Out!! (not the Mr. Sandman version)
Zelda series
SMB series
Contra series
Ninja Gaiden series
GIJoe series
Kirby's Adventure
Batman (if you like it, try Kabuki Quantum Fighter)
Final Fantasy
Crystalis
Other interesting games:
River City Ransom
Super Dodge Ball
Nintendo World Cup
Little Nemo
Shatterhand
Dragon Warrior
Journey to Silius
Metal Gear
Interesting translated ROMs:
Sweet Home
Final Fantasy III
Interesting Prototypes and unreleased games for emulation:
Batman (Different cutscenes, etc)
California Raisins
Earthbound
Maniac Mansion (uncensored)
Interesting Accesories:
Game Genie (mostly for debug and weird stuff than cheating)
Game Action Replay (gives you SaveState function I have yet to figure out entirely)
JoyCard Sansui SSS (great controller, famicom themed, turbo and simulated stereo on headphones)
NES Advantage (haven't used mine in years, but some people like them a lot)
ROB (Crappy but gives you bragging rights)
Cleaning Kit (avoid the blinking!)
Tips and mods:
USE A/V output for better video
You can disconnect the lockout chip to use PAL games and (supposedly) improve compatibility
SNES controllers can be rewired to work on it
Games are cheaper than their virtual console counterparts most of the time
Some old games have a Famicom adaptor, but a standalone adaptor is way better
Can be overclocked rather easily
Second version does not support A/V output without a mod
-
All Hail The New Flesh
- 64-bit
- Posts: 366
- Joined: Mon Nov 27, 2006 9:53 pm
- Location: New Hartford, CT, USA
I think you should include this guide, not really recommended for newbs, but it is interesting
http://www.classicgaming.com/features/a ... nesrepair/
http://www.classicgaming.com/features/a ... nesrepair/

- Pullmyfinger
- Next-Gen
- Posts: 1470
- Joined: Sat Jan 28, 2006 12:49 pm
- Location: Orange County
- Contact:
Much better to just buy a new 72 pin.All Hail The New Flesh wrote:I think you should include this guide, not really recommended for newbs, but it is interesting
http://www.classicgaming.com/features/a ... nesrepair/
- extrarice
- 64-bit
- Posts: 318
- Joined: Fri Feb 23, 2007 7:44 pm
- Location: A Mountain Stronghold in Northern California
New 72-pin parts tend to be a little tight, which makes taking games out of a "toaster"-style NES rather difficult. But it's a lot easier to just replace that part than bending the pins back into place on an original connector.Mozgus wrote:Much better to just buy a new 72 pin.All Hail The New Flesh wrote:I think you should include this guide, not really recommended for newbs, but it is interesting
http://www.classicgaming.com/features/a ... nesrepair/
-
CoreFighter
- Newbie
- Posts: 2
- Joined: Fri Mar 16, 2007 9:16 pm
- grittykitty
- forever 16-bit
- Posts: 952
- Joined: Sat Dec 03, 2005 1:49 am
- Location: sega nomad
you can get bootleg carts with lots of games on it pretty easily. up until i sold it 2 years ago, i had a 31-in-1 cart that had mostly arcade games but did have some rare stuff (like yie-ar kung fu, pooyan, karateka). i've played a few bootleg carts when i had an nes and i was always pleased. my cart was a bit heavy though and sometimes required my "blinking screen" fix, which leads me to my next "thing you should know"...
a fix that almost always worked for me when i had that blinking screen was to wiggle the cart using my index fingers, held at the tips of the cart, from side to side (with the power off) while it was loaded and pressed down into the system. hoorah!
a fix that almost always worked for me when i had that blinking screen was to wiggle the cart using my index fingers, held at the tips of the cart, from side to side (with the power off) while it was loaded and pressed down into the system. hoorah!
Re: What Should Beginners Know About The NES?
Does anybody have any tips to add for what to look for when buying an NES?
Or any other tips for new NES owners
Or any other tips for new NES owners
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Re: What Should Beginners Know About The NES?
Well for the beginner or someone getting into collecting/playing the original nes...
I'd suggest getting the game bit tool to open the nes cartridges. The most crucial thing with the original nes is keeping the game cartridges clean (the contacts) so they actually play when you put them into a nes. (everyone knows about the blinking light on the power button)
The only real way to clean the games is to open them up (need the game bit tool) and polish the contacts with a towel/rag and some copper/brass polish.
If you got a little skill you actually clean the original 72 pin connecters inside the nes. (take the 72 pin out first)
I'm not sure why but the original nes games are severly prone to oxidation/dirt/grime.
It might be related to how the games make contact inside the nes. (contact is made by pressure)
I'd suggest getting the game bit tool to open the nes cartridges. The most crucial thing with the original nes is keeping the game cartridges clean (the contacts) so they actually play when you put them into a nes. (everyone knows about the blinking light on the power button)
The only real way to clean the games is to open them up (need the game bit tool) and polish the contacts with a towel/rag and some copper/brass polish.
If you got a little skill you actually clean the original 72 pin connecters inside the nes. (take the 72 pin out first)
I'm not sure why but the original nes games are severly prone to oxidation/dirt/grime.
It might be related to how the games make contact inside the nes. (contact is made by pressure)