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Stephan

@rora_borealis @ChrisFerguson @EposVox what do you mean by those cartridges degrade over time without use? I know the old GameBoy cartridges contain batteries that would eventually be used up, but the new 3DS cartridges also have such time bombs in them?

2 comments
Chris Ferguson

@durchaus
@rora_borealis @EposVox

The batteries for older Gameboy games are quite affordable to replace. I just paid my local used game shop last week 5 dollars to have it done, and plenty of others game shops and people do it too! Modern cartridges (GBA forward I believe, but certainly NDS forward) don't need battery replacements at all.

Chris Ferguson

@durchaus
@rora_borealis @EposVox

Additionally, if you physically own the games, you may legally (in the US) back them up and play those backups (again, legally in the US) via official hardware, or emulation, or on FPGA hardware. Hardware and software for older systems that performs these backups is around 50-150 dollars depending on the hardware kit.

Physical really let's you own your stuff, even when it gets old, you can personally preserve and repair it, legally in most places.

@durchaus
@rora_borealis @EposVox

Additionally, if you physically own the games, you may legally (in the US) back them up and play those backups (again, legally in the US) via official hardware, or emulation, or on FPGA hardware. Hardware and software for older systems that performs these backups is around 50-150 dollars depending on the hardware kit.

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