@Specter86 : actually games today do have awesome musics (shadow of the colossus thanks to Kow Otani), even when the game isn’t worth it (modern warfare 2 thanks to hans zimmer). But this is not the same kind of music, even though both types are awesome to the max.
@nintendogeek89 I’m not sure there’s alot of people and things with their own stuff.
Wex has his rig thingy on his arm.
That would be coo though Jim Vs. Wex
@MN12BIRD I know you can check by weight too. The difference is pretty noticeable. I can def tell a difference between my adapter hogan’s alley and a later release. One option is to bring your own cart or ask to hold a different one to help avoid getting disappointments.
@Luigi84289 Yep I know about that but I went into a pawn shop who had 4 copies of Gyromite all 5 screw carts and I opened all of them and none of them had the adapter inside. It’s only the really really early releases and I don’t think there are that many around here.
There’s an easy way to get an adaptor. The early 1985 launch games were just the famicom game board plugged into a 72 pin adapter. If you have one of these early games identified by having flat head screws in the back you don’t need to waste money on an external adapter. Just take the game board out of the famicom game plug it onto the adapter from the nes game close the nes game back up and pop it into your toaster/top loader.
The Famicom only has pins for the rom chips and FM Synthesis modules. The NES removed the 2 FM synthesis pins but added 8 expansion port pins, and 4 for the 10nes chip.
@Xskills16 yeah I thought the same thing but I checked it out – the NES has ten extra pins for the expansion slot at the bottom, four for the lockout chip. But hey, 72 minus 60 equals 12 but I said there are 14 extra pins! Indeed 2 pins on the Famicom were for sound I/O where unfortunately Nintendo of Gaikoku decided we would never need better sound than the NES but we would need to connect something to the bottom one day (what, a CD rom drive? ha)
thank you so much for this video beacuse of this i found out that i was putting the cartridge in the wrong way i almost returned the famicom game and the converter
Does it really work with every Game?
To my knowledge the Famicom supported In Cartridge Support Chips (like the SNES) but the western NES didn’t hat any Expansion support.
Some late Games had special coProcessors and Sound Chips.
The Western version of some (not many) Games had less impressive graphics and sound.
It was a way to get enhanced NES capabilities to people without Famicom Disk System. The FDS was impossible co convert. For the Same Reason. The Dropped Extension Support .
and now for ps3 lulz
@Darkemo54 Thankfully looking gay and actually being gay are two entirely different things. This game is awesome
@OxYcOd0n3 I was talking about the soundtrack lol, I think all versions are different for the most part.
@SonicSpeedsMyGame Wrong:
PC, SNES, SEGA Genesis.
@Specter86 : actually games today do have awesome musics (shadow of the colossus thanks to Kow Otani), even when the game isn’t worth it (modern warfare 2 thanks to hans zimmer). But this is not the same kind of music, even though both types are awesome to the max.
This game looks So gay but it has good music T_T
Em ess ess nor
na na na na na na na na hey hey hey goodbye
Tommy Tallarico needs to do this song with Marty O Donnell. SOlO!!! m/
@Specter86 >megaman 10
>megaman 9
It sounds like a mix between breakdancing and liquid dancing. Oh well, This game rocks!
Damn thats a tasty solo!
@HawtDawg925 Yeah, I know, I forgot to mention the “HD” part…
@alfabeta231 If you mean Jim HD, they still have different music.
@Specter86 Same reason why most games suck these days. (At least more than older games, anyway.)
You know . . . I always thought the SNES version was pretty fucking amazing. And then I heard this.
I NEED A LIQUID INJECTION OF THIS MUSIC, STAT!
This is the verision that they have in the PS game Wild 9 aswell
Why is it I feel like singing “Smooth Criminal” to this?
EJ’s facial expressions have always been the best
X3
@SonicSpeedsMyGame AAAAAAAAAAAAND PS3 =D (Just search it, It was recently added =D)
Use your garrys mod!
@hoboterror also snes, genesis, playstation, sega cd, saturn, and gba
Whooooooooooaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa Nellllly!!!!
Earthworm Jim would kick my ass…
@nintendogeek89 I’m not sure there’s alot of people and things with their own stuff.
Wex has his rig thingy on his arm.
That would be coo though Jim Vs. Wex
@MN12BIRD I know you can check by weight too. The difference is pretty noticeable. I can def tell a difference between my adapter hogan’s alley and a later release. One option is to bring your own cart or ask to hold a different one to help avoid getting disappointments.
@Luigi84289 Yep I know about that but I went into a pawn shop who had 4 copies of Gyromite all 5 screw carts and I opened all of them and none of them had the adapter inside. It’s only the really really early releases and I don’t think there are that many around here.
There’s an easy way to get an adaptor. The early 1985 launch games were just the famicom game board plugged into a 72 pin adapter. If you have one of these early games identified by having flat head screws in the back you don’t need to waste money on an external adapter. Just take the game board out of the famicom game plug it onto the adapter from the nes game close the nes game back up and pop it into your toaster/top loader.
@MN12BIRD Well they are the same games after all just have different pin interfaces.
where would one find this?
@Xskills16 Famicom =60 pins
NES =72.
The Famicom only has pins for the rom chips and FM Synthesis modules. The NES removed the 2 FM synthesis pins but added 8 expansion port pins, and 4 for the 10nes chip.
@Xskills16 yeah I thought the same thing but I checked it out – the NES has ten extra pins for the expansion slot at the bottom, four for the lockout chip. But hey, 72 minus 60 equals 12 but I said there are 14 extra pins! Indeed 2 pins on the Famicom were for sound I/O where unfortunately Nintendo of Gaikoku decided we would never need better sound than the NES but we would need to connect something to the bottom one day (what, a CD rom drive? ha)
thank you so much for this video beacuse of this i found out that i was putting the cartridge in the wrong way i almost returned the famicom game and the converter
where can i buy that converter?
The 1 minute intro is a little long and pointless. (Good idea, but way too long)
Dude i have the same converter! ;D
I have on of these but I made it myself out of a copy of gyromite I got at a yard sale for 50 cents.
@89Geno Yep all you need is the adapter and you’re good to go.
so all u need to do this is a nes, a 60 pin famicom to 72 pin nes adapter and a famicom game in order to play famicom games on a nes?
check famicom disk system xD
this is cool but it sucks why because the only fami game i would want to play on an NES is the real SMB2 & that a freakin floppy disk, damn it!
where can i get 1 and where can i get a famicom game without ebay?
in my opinion the famicom looks like crap, i like the nes/nes2 style better
@MN12BIRD Yea, the NES is 72 because of the 10NES pins and pins for the expansion port on the bottom.
try play NES Games on a Famicom with a special adaptor.
Have you by any chance neen able to use game genie with the converter? because for some reason it scrambles the Famicom games…
Does it really work with every Game?
To my knowledge the Famicom supported In Cartridge Support Chips (like the SNES) but the western NES didn’t hat any Expansion support.
Some late Games had special coProcessors and Sound Chips.
The Western version of some (not many) Games had less impressive graphics and sound.
It was a way to get enhanced NES capabilities to people without Famicom Disk System. The FDS was impossible co convert. For the Same Reason. The Dropped Extension Support .
does any one know where i can buy one of these, because the only other meathode i know of is to buy gyromight n gut it
@Sonic5274 he said it in the vid, excite bike
@xXxLAMBOFGOD12xXx
Because it makes sense.