11 Facts About Famicom Titler

1.

Famicom Titler elected to revert to the top-loading cartridge slot with the NES due to reliability issues with the original front-loading slot.

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2.

The New Famicom Titler was discontinued in September 2003 along with the Super Famicom Titler Jr.

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3.

The last Famicom Titler was kept by Nintendo and loaned to the organizers of Level X, a game exhibition held from December 2003 to February 2004 at the Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography, for a Famicom Titler retrospective in commemoration of the console's 20th anniversary.

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4.

Twin Famicom Titler is a home video game console produced by Sharp.

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5.

Whereas the standard Famicom Titler only has one color combination, the Twin Famicom Titler was initially sold in two colors: red with black highlights, and black with red highlights .

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6.

Basic parts of the Twin Famicom Titler include a slot for Famicom Titler cartridges, a slot for the Disk System's floppy disks, a switch located right below the cartridge slot to switch between the two formats, a power button, a reset button, and an eject button, while the back of the console has slots for controller storage.

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7.

The Twin Famicom Titler has the expansion port present in other Famicom Titler variations that allows additional peripherals to be connected to the console; it is located on the right side of the console and labeled "Expansion Terminal A".

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8.

Twin Famicom Titler generates an NTSC signal, but outputs composite video and monophonic audio via RCA connectors instead of using an RF modulator, allowing for greater audiovisual quality on TVs and monitors with such inputs; such connections were rare in Japan when it was released.

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9.

Famicom Titler, known as the Famicom Editor, is a Famicom-based home video game console produced by Sharp Corporation under license from Nintendo in 1989.

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10.

System and PlayChoice-10 arcade systems; the Famicom Titler is recognized by collectors as a practical way to obtain such a system appropriate for modern television sets.

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11.

System's hardware was virtually similar to that of the Famicom Titler, it included more random-access memory ; utilizing the bank switching technique, games for the system could support more levels and features than their console counterparts.

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