|
Answer» I heard that some people have gotten their HANDS on a NOAC (NES on a Chip) and made portable NESs from it. I have a plan to put one on an NES gamepad, and make an NES Ultraportable, it will have 4 ports: SD card, MMC port, AV-out, and Player 2. Others have put one in a case, but I've never heard of one that uses ROMs (It's legal if you own the Cart. Right?). I intend to do everything legally, but is the NOAC legal? And if so, where can I get one?There have been plenty of success stories (Portendo for example) and BEN Heckendorn has written a pretty extensive book and I haven't really seen much in the way of legal action against any of the people who do this stuff, so although I'm SURE Nintendo probably isn't a big fan of it, I don't know if it's considered illegal. Especially if it's for your own personal use. ROMs might be pushing it a bit, though. If you decide to venture into all of this, just be careful and do as much research as you can.
As for where to ACTUALLY find an NOAC...I have no idea how to go about acquiring one.ok, it probably isn't worth it. I kind of want a cross between a gaming console and an mp4 player (not the PSP, no way, too expensive). I saw this thing called a super-card and was wondering whether it works like it should, and whether it's legal, it's supposed to be like a ROM loader, but with pre-loaded ROMs for watchin movies and stuff, no worries, I don't care for 'boot-legged' software as it has been known to cause PROBLEMS, no matter what platform.
|