While you're here, please consider supporting GamingOnLinux on:
Reward Tiers: Patreon. Plain Donations: PayPal.
This ensures all of our main content remains totally free for everyone! Patreon supporters can also remove all adverts and sponsors! Supporting us helps bring good, fresh content. Without your continued support, we simply could not continue!
You can find even more ways to support us on this dedicated page any time. If you already are, thank you!
Reward Tiers: Patreon. Plain Donations: PayPal.
This ensures all of our main content remains totally free for everyone! Patreon supporters can also remove all adverts and sponsors! Supporting us helps bring good, fresh content. Without your continued support, we simply could not continue!
You can find even more ways to support us on this dedicated page any time. If you already are, thank you!
Login / Register
- Intel and NVIDIA drivers holding back a public SteamOS release, Valve not trying to compete with Windows
- GOG joins the European Federation of Game Archives, Museums and Preservation Projects
- NTSYNC driver for improving Windows games on Linux with Wine / Proton should finally land in Linux kernel 6.14
- Even with SteamOS coming to more systems Bazzite has no plans to go anywhere
- NonSteamLaunchers tool for installing popular game stores working on better Desktop Linux support
- > See more over 30 days here
-
GE-Proton 9-23 released with a Battle.net update fix fo…
- 14 -
GE-Proton 9-23 released with a Battle.net update fix fo…
- ToddL -
GE-Proton 9-23 released with a Battle.net update fix fo…
- ElamanOpiskelija -
Wireless HORIPAD for Steam gets a firmware fix for the …
- ThatSpoonyBard -
WebScreen is a customizable open source mini-screen tha…
- rkl - > See more comments
where have you been?!, it's a Linux-based retro-focussed games-console platform that launched in 2020, which offers a number of different types of hardware which all run games from a line of curated cartridges. These cartridges almost always contain multiple games, and cover actual retro games along with retro-styled indie releases - 1970s/1980s/1990s retro is basically the condition of being allowed on the platform at all. Though there are a few native titles (curiously including some indies, such as Donut Dodo, which do not have Linux builds on Steam) the vast majority are emulated games - often including indie games that are made for retro consoles.The hardware is primarily handheld-based, with there always being a flagship horizontally-oriented Evercade handheld (with the current one also offering a dedicated TATE mode setup for vertical games), plus a multiplayer-focussed home-console with four controller-ports, fittingly known as the Evercade VS. There's also now the budget-friendly Super Pocket line from sister-brand Hyper Mega Tech!, which are vertically-oriented handhelds that contain built-in retro games from a single company per handheld, but which can also run Evercade cartridges.
So, with that out of the way, since the Evercade is a Linux-based gaming platform, I just wanted to make a dedicated thread for it here on GOL, and here it is.
In keeping with my love for portable devices, which was primarily influenced by growing up with the Game Boy line, my Evercade hardware of choice is a Taito Super Pocket, and I've already picked up a bunch of cartridges that're right up my alley. Some of them contain games unavailable on Steam, GOG, or Itch.io, since certain titles (particularly arcade ones) are currently tied up on consoles and the Microsoft Store and aren't more widely-available than that, leaving the Evercade as the only licensed way to play some of them on any sort of Linux system.
!Super Pocket and Evercade cartridges
My favourite cartridges so far have proven to be Data East Arcade 1 (which includes titles like Burger Time, Lock 'n' Chase, Sly Spy, and Tumblepop, amongst others), Jaleco Arcade 1 (where the headliner for me is, without a doubt, Rod Land, but it's also a really well-rounded look at arcade games of that era in general), and Sunsoft Collection 1 (which has the only Bomberman game on the Evercade platform so far, in the form of Blaster Master Boy, which is in fact Bomber King Scenario 2, part of a spin-off branch of the Bomberman series, and also offers a really good selection of hard-to-find titles). I also quite like Gremlin Collection 1, but that's honestly a mixed bag of a cartridge - I got it mainly for Zool, but will probably try Hardcore 4x4 as well, though the rest aren't for me.
!Sunsoft Collection 1 manual, page 12 - Blaster Master Boy
I'm also really impressed by how the manuals include facts that relate to preserving information, even when they run contrary to how a provided game is being marketed, such as in this example from the Sunsoft Collection 1 manual, referring to Blaster Master Boy: "Fact: Blaster Master Boy wasn't a sequel to Blaster Master in Japan; it's actually a follow-up to a spin-off of the popular Bomberman series!".
Anyone else have or considering any of the Evercade hardware? Are you looking forward to future Evercade re-releases like the Nintendo 64 version of once-popular 3D-platformer Glover? Got any favourite cartridges? Hoping for revised consoles with particular features? Anything else? Please share!
Joking aside......
The device does look nice and solid...... I was worried about the dpad but im glad thats ok........ And I do like the idea of the Evercade..... Lets hope it keeps getting better and better....... And hopefully it will get some real Bomberman games soon enough for you......
!Evercade Jaleco Collection 1
It was in as-new condition and cost £12 (the new price is £17.99), and even still had the unused poster in the box. It includes 10 games, so that's £1.20 per game - you couldn't even get the original NES and SNES cartridges for that money!
Hey, Blaster Master Boy/Blaster Master Jr./Bomber King Scenario 2 is totally a real Bomberman game! (And quite a challenging one at that, because you basically have to save as many Lantern items as possible for later stages of the game that take place in the dark - and you're never clued in by the game until it's way too late!)
I'm really liking what I've been seeing between late 2023 and early 2024, so far - the Super Pockets really are a strong offering for their price-point and build-quality (I'm looking forward to seeing what others might show up - and if that's how we get a Bomberman collection I'd be fine with that!), and the cartridges released over the last few months and the ones scheduled until April are all pretty interesting.
I would love that. I'm really hoping for a Bomberman collection, I really am - honestly that would push me into picking up the Evercade VS home-console with the four controller-ports, as well. If that's a no-go (though to be fair, Konami isn't totally awful at keeping old games in circulation, and I'm sure they'd be open to it since these guys even managed to get Capcom on-board), I'd be happy to see Bomberland turn up on one of their Commodore 64 collections, though!
Last edited by Mezron on 23 Feb 2024 at 12:06 pm UTC
I wrote a review of the Taito Super Pocket recently, where I mentioned a few caveats about that (namely that there are a couple of games that don't run on the Super Pocket machines), but yeah, you could easily buy an Evercade-compatible device and not update it and get the intended experience, it feels like so far. That was actually one of the reasons why I went for a Super Pocket.
It's really neat (not to mention somewhat nostalgic) to be able to go into a shop, come out with a cartridge, and put it straight in the machine and start playing immediately with no fuss!
Last edited by Pengling on 23 Feb 2024 at 12:27 pm UTC
My partner and I would be super grateful if we picked this up and just started playing without having to do more work.
Last edited by Pengling on 16 Apr 2024 at 1:41 pm UTC
Last edited by Pengling on 17 Apr 2024 at 12:10 pm UTC
Getting on for 40 for some of these Namco ones! That makes me feel old!
Hahahaha!
They did a really good promotional photo for it, too;
!Evercade Tomb Raider Collection 1 key-art
I bloody love it - it really nails both the retro handheld feel of the Evercade line, and the presentation of the classic Tomb Raider games.
Last edited by Pengling on 19 Apr 2024 at 5:11 pm UTC
Full Void is breathtaking, though I got a flickering bug. I’m hoping the update I’m very slowly downloading right now will fix it.
!Evercade Alpha 01
!Evercade Alpha 02
The two announced versions both include different libraries of built-in Capcom games, as well as having twin Evercade cartridge-slots; The Mega Man-themed one features Mega Man: The Power Battle, Mega Man 2: The Power Fighters, Carrier Air Wing, Final Fight, Knights of the Round, and Strider, and the Street Fighter-themed one features Street Fighter II' Champion Edition, Super Street Fighter II Turbo, Super Puzzle Fighter II Turbo, Street Fighter Alpha - Warriors' Dreams, Street Fighter Alpha 2, and Street Fighter Alpha 3.
I was hoping that they would do something like this! My only quibble is that they went with bat-top sticks instead of ball-top. I had previously been considering picking up the (also Linux-based) Arcade1Up Pac-Man cabinet, but now these new Evercade devices are serious contenders that will take up a lot less space... Decisions, decisions!
Two new Super Pocket handhelds were just announced - this time, Atari and Technos versions.
Both feature a mix of arcade and console titles, with the Technos Edition including 15 games, and the Atari Edition (which also comes in a limited-edition woodgrain version for an extra £10*) including a whopping 50!
!Limited Edition Atari Super Pocket
*This is limited to 2600 units. Cute.
Since some of the titles here have previously appeared on other handheld devices, Blaze claims that the games on these units aren't available on any other retro device at this price, which is interesting.
They're both due out in October.