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The Power Player Super Joy III (also known as Power Joy, Power Games, and XA-76-1E) is a Nintendo Entertainment System/Famicom video game console clone. It is notable for legal issues based on the violation of intellectual property rights held by Nintendo and its various game licensees.
Playervision or Game Stick is another unauthorized Nintendo Entertainment System hardware clone built into a gamepad and sold in South America, and is just one version of Power Player Super Joy III, nevertheless, the name of the product varies on and in the box, user manual and the gamepad video game console itself. For example, the instruction ...
The TIA also provides two channels of one-bit sound. Each channel provides for 32 pitch values and 16 possible bit sequences. There is a 4 bit volume control. [4] Lastly, the TIA has inputs for reading up to four analog paddle controllers using potentiometers and for two joystick triggers. [4]
Commodore 64 joystick adapters are hardware peripherals that extend the number of joystick ports on the Commodore 64 computer. The additional joysticks can be used on games with dedicated support for the specific adapter. A number of different joystick adapters have been constructed for use with the C64.
Super UFO - auto-fire, extra A/B/Y/X around regular buttons, but no extra L/R, no turbo option or switch for L/R (Fire) TopFighter - desktop joystick, programmable, LCD panel, auto-fire, slow-motion (QJ) Turbo Touch 360 - joypad with auto-fire (Triax) V356 - normal joypad, with 3-position switch (Recoton) noname joypads - normal joypad clones ...
The C64 Direct-to-TV computer-in-a-joystick unit. C64 Direct-to-TV. The C64 Direct-to-TV, called C64DTV for short, is a single-chip implementation of the Commodore 64 computer, contained in a joystick (modeled after the mid-1980s Competition Pro joystick), with 30 built-in games. The design is similar to the Atari Classics 10-in-1 TV Game.
Pastel green body, with pastel yellow fire buttons, pastel pink joystick shaft and pastel blue torque controller The internal structure of a Cruiser joystick. The Powerplay Cruiser was a joystick released in 1986, during the time that the Atari ST, ZX Spectrum, Commodore 64 and Commodore Amiga were all popular home computers.
Does anyone know the purpose of the battery pack (holds 4 x AA batteries; 6 volts) that plugs into the underside of the Super Joy III? Logically one would assume it offers an alternate power source, replacing the need for the 9v DC-adapter and making it more portable, but it doesn't power up off batteries.