Remember when you could buy a game and then actually have the game? How naive those developers were. -_-

On a side note, I'm sad for your nonfunctioning keyboard. sad Why not just try have the cartridge load into the gameboy itself and have the electronics essentially how they would be by default in the gameboy? It seems like not having the cool toploading cartridge is a small sacrifice to pay for a functioning midi controller.

2

(5 replies, posted in Software & Plug-ins)

Thank you! This is awesome.

3

(3 replies, posted in Nintendo Handhelds)

Ooh!
I totally misinterpreted the instructions. Thank you very much.

4

(3 replies, posted in Nintendo Handhelds)

I apologise if this question has been asked frequently, but my searches didn't yield anything. Is it possible to take an LSDJ .sav file from an emulator and put it on a USB 64M Smart Card? I just got mine from Kitsch-Bent and up until now I've been only emulating LSDJ (although I've been emulating for a while). I can't seem to find a way to do that with the LSDJ file manager.

And thank you for the cartridge, Kitsch! The Bear Whistle sticker is hilarious.

This forum is awesome. That was my first post and the responses were immediate. Thank you everybody.

For anyone else interested, this link was posted on that NesDev forum: http://theshizz.org/forum/index.php?/to … -was-made/

+1 for internet communities.

I've had zero luck trying to find out how people made the soundtrack for old games that were made before chip music software existed. For example, how was the soundtrack to Pokemon red and blue made? There's probably an obvious answer, so please school me.