Not exactly. LG released two versions of the original 3do in Korea, one that looks like the Goldstar unit that we got in the US and one that looks similar to this unit called the Alive II. The LG 3do Alive II from Korea has some cosmetic differences from this case. Here is a link to a great Brazilian 3do site with pictures of both units:
http://geracao3do.awardspace.com/index.php
True, but it's the same case nonetheless and not something that was designed for the M2.
Sure, it's very similar, but that small photo which has been circulating for years was a picture of the prototype case for the proposed LG M2 which they showed at a couple of trade shows. I actually have a picture of that version in a press kit somewhere in my stuff and it has a small card next to it which identifies it as an M2 system. My understanding is that it was in fact designed for their M2 and when they determined that it wasn't going to happen, at least not as a game console, they went ahead and released another version of the Alive 3do player for the Korean market using a similar case design called the Alive II.
I find that incredibly hard to believe. Early PSP models looked identical to the final model. PSP development was pushed out the door so fast that the door mechanisms on the first million units still had the little arm to slide open the "floppy-style" cover that was removed from the UMDs.
I particularly like the button on the top left that says "Analog". It's like someone saw a prototype PSP and described it to an artist who interpreted it literally.
Last edited by ProgrammingAce; 12-29-2008 at 01:17 PM.
No, I did not post pictures of the Sony/Namco System 11 board which is based on PlayStation, that ran Tekken. What I posted were the 16-bit NA-1 and NA-2 boards.
http://www.system16.com/museum.php?id=7
Possible, of course, but it wouldn't make much sense, to be honest. Why would they waste money to release another version of the 3DO only because they had an unused case lying around? They would have had to redesign the pcb so that it fits into the already-existing case, or modify the case so that the pcb fits. Not very economical, especially for a console that never performed well.
I don't understand your argument. We know they did release a second version of the 3do in Korea called the Alive II with that case. The fact that they recycled a case they intended to use for the M2 makes perfect sense since they already had the design ready, it looked pretty good and they already had the molds made. Korean 3do sales were actually pretty good, at least good enough to justify Korean exclusive game development by LG. I believe the Alive II wasn't even released until 1996 which was well after the system was dead in the US.
Took some pictures of the Nintendo AVS while I was out yesterday:
http://superiorversion.com/?p=103
I would very much like to see if there are any existing prototypes of the
NEC / Hudson 16-bit PC Engine 2 and the Namco 16-bit Super System,
regardless whether they were different, seperate machines, or, if they were
one and the same....
I remember reading in PSM back in 2000 about the Xbox when it was first announced. They said Microsoft had a prototype of it at E3, and that it was shaped like an X. Here's what I found:
I've never seen that particular picture before, but it looks like the one in PSM. Anyone know if that's right? Also, if that PSP prototype is real, then it looks 1000x better than what we got. On the other hand, it looks like it would be uncomfortable to play on.
Knowledge is Power.
Power corrupts.
Study hard.
Be evil.
those giant x things are just PCs in a big aluminum shell. They cost about $10,000 each to make. There were roughly 6 of them.
It does, It's carved from a single block of aluminum. And there's an S-Video output.
Guy I know has the blueprints, I said i wanted one to make a coffee table out of. Just throw a piece of glass on top.
I'd really love to own a 3DO M2 console someday. I don't have the money to buy one off of ebay when they come up, though.
I have no idea where they got their information about the Indrema console. They seem to think that it was Nuon based, which it wasn't. It was usually compared to the Nuon series, since it was trying to get into the same market. But the Indrema was running (if I remember right) an 800mhz Intel knock-off processor and a Linux based OS either embedded or possibly on a hard drive. It was an open source development system, which I think was the reason why it never got off the launch pad. From what I remember, there weren't any memorable or interesting games being developed for it. There were some graphics demos and a few minor league Linux mini-games for it, but nothing that a game console could launch with. And I got the impression at the time that it didn't look like anyone was stepping up to the plate to develop any 'real' games for it.