

All the essentials are there and the buttons feel quite nice and I was pleased. There’s a start button and a menu button as well as an on and off switch. The D-Pad rolls rather than rocks which are nice for fighting, and it includes A, B, and C buttons as well as X, Y, and Z which are used for a fighting game. It has a 2.8″ 4:3 screen which is perfect for these older games as widescreen was not a thing at home at the time. This has no moving parts and only needs a small battery. We are used to the weight of portable systems like the PSP, GBA, or even DS. The system itself is extremely light and some would say feels cheap. I realized it was probably a Chinese knock-off, but still of some sort of quality.

It’s the game player in a cardboard tray, a loosely packed USB cable, and a manual tossed in. When you open the box you don’t get any fancy packaging like you would from a first-party company. I can’t say I don’t regret my purchase, but I did at first.
