File:Gamate Logo.svg | |
![]() Gamate and 3 games | |
Manufacturer | Bit Corporation United Microelectronics Corporation |
---|---|
Type | Handheld game console |
Generation | Fourth generation |
Lifespan | 1990–1994 |
Media | ROM Card |
CPU | UMC UA6588F (earlier revision) NCR 81489 (later revision) both 6502 based |
Memory | 16KB RAM |
Display | LCD in 4 greyscale |
Graphics | 160 x 152 pixels |
Sound | General Instrument AY-3-8910[1] mono internal speaker |
Power | 6V, four AA batteries |
Dimensions | 16.7 × 9.7 × 3.3 cm (6.58 × 3.82 × 1.3 inches) |
The Gamate,[2] known as 超級小子 (pinyin: chāojí xiǎozi, literally "Super Boy") in Taiwan and 超级神童 (pinyin: chāojí shéntóng, literally "Super Child Prodigy") in China, is a handheld game console manufactured by Bit Corporation in the early 1990s, and released in Australia, some parts of Europe, Asia (Taiwan and China), Argentina, and the United States.
The only emulator that supports it is MESS,[3] with games also playable on a MiSTer. Over 70 games, not all dumped, are known to have been produced for the system.
- ↑ Kevtris. "Gamate Inside".
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ "Meet the Gamate, the Handheld Which Tried to Take on the Game Boy and Failed". 13 February 2014.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ "MESS Git (2015/03/14)". EmuCR. Retrieved 19 March 2015.
{{cite web}}
: