Misplaced Pages

Gakken Compact Vision TV Boy

Article snapshot taken from[REDACTED] with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Compact Vision TV Boy) Home video game console by Gakken
Gakken Compact Vision TV Boy
A Gakken Compact Vision TV Boy
DeveloperGakken
TypeHome video game console
GenerationSecond generation
Release date
  • JP: October 1983
Introductory price¥8,800
MediaROM cartridge
CPUMotorola MC6801
Memory2k RAM
Display128 × 192 pixels, 9 colors (only 4 can be shown at the same time)
GraphicsMotorola 6847

The Gakken Compact Vision TV Boy (Japanese: TV ボーイ, Hepburn: TV bōi) is a second generation home video game console developed by Gakken and released in Japan in 1983 for a price of ¥8,800.

The system was made to compete with the Epoch Cassette Vision, which had a market dominance of 70% in Japan.

The console was released months after the Nintendo Famicom and Sega SG-1000 which, although more expensive at ¥15,000, were more advanced and had more features as well as bigger games libraries; furthermore, Epoch had just launched the Cassette Vision Jr. revision for ¥5,000. These factors made the system obsolete from the start, with a high price tag, few and comparably rudimentary games, and a strange form factor, leading to poor sales. As a result, it is now a rare collector's item among some retro gamers.

In January 2024, the Gakken Compact Vision TV Boy game console hardware and six games were ROM dumped, scanned and preserved. This console could only be played on the MAME emulator.

Technical specifications

  • CPU (cartridge): Motorola MC6801 (8-bit) clocked at 4 MHz
  • RAM: 2 Kb
  • Internal graphics: Motorola MC6847: 128 × 192 pixel; 9 colors (only four at the same time: white, orange, green and magenta or yellow, green, red and blue)

Games

There were only six games officially released for the system, each being sold for ¥3,800, and designed for a single player.

  • Excite Invader
  • Mr. Bomb
  • Robotan Wars
  • Chitaikū Daisakusen (Japanese: 地対空大作戦, 'The grand operation of surface-to-air') - a port of Super Cobra
  • Frogger
  • Shigaisen 200X-nen (Japanese: 市街戦200X年, Hepburn: shigaisen nisen-ekkusu-nen, 'Urban warfare year 200X')

References

  1. ^ "Compact Vision TV Boy by Gakken – the Video Game Kraken".
  2. ^ "Every Gakken Compact Vision TV Boy Game Preserved & Scanned! – Gaming Alexandria".
  3. ^ "Gakken Compact Vision TV Boy [BINARIUM]". binarium.de. Archived from the original on 2023-02-05. Retrieved 2020-06-15.
  4. "The Video Game Console Library". Video Game Console Library. Retrieved 2020-06-15.
Video game consoles (second generation)
Form factor
Functionality
Generations
Second
generation
Home
Handheld
Dedicated
Lists
← First generation Third generation →
Home video game consoles
Atari
Bandai
Casio
Coleco
Commodore
Epoch
LeapFrog
Mattel
Microsoft (Xbox)
NEC
Nintendo
Panasonic
Philips
RCA
Sega
SNK (Neo Geo)
Sony (PlayStation)
VTech
Others
1970s
1980s
1990s
2000s
2010s
2020s
List
Stub icon

This video game-related article on computer hardware is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories:
Gakken Compact Vision TV Boy Add topic