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View Full Version : How are those TG16 hucard labels on there?



zektor
05-18-2003, 01:44 AM
For those that have some games you know what I mean. The "label" if that is even appropriate to call it... is kind of built into the platic card. It can't peel, and as far as I know now it can't be rubbed off. See, I got a few games in the mail today from an Ebay win and one of them had a "Gamedude" sticker on it. One of those "peel it and see VOID" type stickers. Well, I peeled it and then used mineral spirits to get the "void" sticker markings off the card. It took it off perfectly, and did nothing to the card's label at all. Needless to say I was pretty happy, and pretty impressed. I wish all the cartridge/card based games were made with labels like these! :)

Videogamerdaryll
05-18-2003, 02:01 AM
For those that have some games you know what I mean. The "label" if that is even appropriate to call it... is kind of built into the platic card. It can't peel, and as far as I know now it can't be rubbed off. See, I got a few games in the mail today from an Ebay win and one of them had a "Gamedude" sticker on it. One of those "peel it and see VOID" type stickers. Well, I peeled it and then used mineral spirits to get the "void" sticker markings off the card. It took it off perfectly, and did nothing to the card's label at all. Needless to say I was pretty happy, and pretty impressed. I wish all the cartridge/card based games were made with labels like these! :)
((I wish all the cartridge/card based games were made with labels like these!))

Me too..

maxlords
05-18-2003, 08:25 AM
He he he. TG16 huCards..quite possibly the most durable games out there! To my knowledge, the printing on the TG16 huCards is not printed ON them, but actually a part of the plastic, screened into the plastic itself when it was made, which is why you rarely see ruined huCards. You pretty much have to take a knife to them to ruin them, or try to bend them in half...that's about all that would do it. Definitely my favorite game cart style. I wish all games were that small! :)

stargate
05-18-2003, 09:32 AM
Yeah, the Hu cards were definitely one of the best designs in gaming. I mean what other game media can you carry 200 games in a lunchbox? They are small, durable, and super cool looking. I wish more systems had used them.

Ed Oscuro
05-18-2003, 07:17 PM
Daimakaimura (SuperGrafx) has a pretty darn nice HuCard illustration (same as the cover, but the detail looks about the same). Hold it sideways and reflect the light off it. See the contours of the image?

omnedon
05-18-2003, 09:44 PM
SEGA Master system cards are the same way, and just as durable. It's a shame they never caught on. They must have been cheaper to manufacture too.

I'm guessing they had marketing issues (how can a big game fit on a small card) for the masses. Some people don't realize cart size has nothing to do with game technology.

Ed Oscuro
05-18-2003, 10:28 PM
That's quite true...in Japan, your Nintendo Family Computer game cartridge was just big enough to hold the ROMs and board comfortably, which is why most are half the size of a US NES cart. Some were quite a bit smaller, like those silly special Bandai + adapter cartridges. Most NES ROM boards don't even fill half the cartridge case; Tengen Tetris only extends halfway into an otherwise empty case.

hamburgler
05-19-2003, 07:39 PM
If they made a new system today with the hu-card technology, it would be awesome and fun to play. :D

zemmix
05-19-2003, 08:22 PM
Hucards would make good memory cards for a system me thinks. You could keep it in your wallet and bring your saves with you anywhere.

zektor
05-19-2003, 09:28 PM
Hucards would make good memory cards for a system me thinks. You could keep it in your wallet and bring your saves with you anywhere.

The Neo Geo used cards for saving, and you can even use them on the Neo Geo arcade machines! Just be sure nobody stuck any gum or anything in the slot at the arcade before you insert your card!