Platform: Game Boy Advance
Sword of Mana
Dragon Ball: Advanced Adventure
Cartoon Network: Block Party
Kien
Star Wars: Flight of the Falcon
Marvel: Ultimate Alliance
Grand Theft Auto Advance
Pitfall: The Mayan Adventure
Rhythm Tengoku
Kirby & the Amazing Mirror
Drill Dozer
Ed, Edd n Eddy: Jawbreakers!
Astro Boy: Omega Factor
Mega Man Zero 2
Spyro: Attack of the Rhynocs
Foodfight!
WarioWare: Twisted!
Pokémon Sapphire Version
Diddy Kong Pilot
F-Zero: GP Legend
Yu-Gi-Oh! 7 Trials to Glory: World Championship Tournament 2005
Mega Man Battle Network 5: Team Protoman
Nicktoons Unite!
Metroid Fusion
Mother 3
Crazy Frog Racer
Hamtaro: Rainbow Rescue
Looney Tunes Double Pack
Densetsu no Starfy
Dragon Ball Z: Buu's Fury
Pokémon Emerald Version
Kingdom Hearts: Chain of Memories
Golden Sun: The Lost Age
Final Fight One
The Sims Bustin' Out
Metroid: Zero Mission
Spyro Orange: The Cortex Conspiracy
Mario vs. Donkey Kong
Samurai Deeper Kyo
The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring
Tomato Adventure
Activision Anthology
Scooby-Doo and the Cyber Chase
Harvest Moon: More Friends of Mineral Town
Crash Bandicoot: The Huge Adventure
Advance Wars
Donkey Kong Country
Phalanx
Mother 1+2
Mega Man Battle Network 4: Blue Moon
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The Game Boy Advance Video "Shrek and Shark Tale" and "Shrek and Shrek 2" double packs, both containing two 1 hour 30 minute movies each, are the largest ROMs in the Game Boy Advance library at 64 megabytes, and achieved this by compressing the films to 240 pixels by 112 pixels, and using a special memory chip.
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The Japanese version of WarioWare: Twisted! features an exclusive start-up screen for the console where the Game Boy logo bounces up off-screen before landing again. Once the logo resumes as normal, a motorcycle heard in the background will stop, causing Wario to shout "Yeah!"
subdirectory_arrow_right Sega Game Gear (Platform), PlayStation (Platform), Game Boy (Platform), Game Boy Color (Platform), Nintendo Entertainment System (Platform), Sega Mega Drive/Genesis (Platform), Arcade (Platform), Sega Master System/Mark III (Platform), Neo Geo AES (Platform), Super Nintendo Entertainment System (Platform)
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In 2018, rapper Soulja Boy attempted to sell his own line of video game consoles, called the SouljaGame line, sold for $149.99 for a console and $99.99 for a handheld. Advertising claimed that the consoles would be compatible with a variety of consoles' games, including modern platforms like the PlayStation Vita, Nintendo 3DS, and Nintendo Switch. They obviously did not have such compatibility, and were rather a generic retro emulator console one could find on small business-oriented retail websites such as Wish and AliExpress loaded with pirated and modified games sold at a markup. Game libraries featured included the Neo Geo, NES, SNES, Game Boy, Game Boy Color, Game Boy Advance, Sega Genesis, Sega Master System, Sega Game Gear, and PlayStation. The only difference from these pre-existing consoles is a photograph of Soulja Boy printed onto the box. He would eventually stop selling SouljaGame consoles, with the website for the console redirecting to Nintendo's 3DS website.
Soulja Boy selling SouljaGame line article:
https://variety.com/2018/gaming/news/soulja-boy-selling-cheap-consoles-1203084022/
Soulja Boy ends sales of SouljaGame line article:
https://www.ign.com/articles/2019/01/02/soulja-boy-stops-selling-souljagame-game-consoles
SouljaGame unboxing and teardown showing the packaging:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fo-qNU7Qu3k
Rerez video reviewing the console SouljaGame was based on, showing the console list:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZqXuAuTFXpA#t=595
https://variety.com/2018/gaming/news/soulja-boy-selling-cheap-consoles-1203084022/
Soulja Boy ends sales of SouljaGame line article:
https://www.ign.com/articles/2019/01/02/soulja-boy-stops-selling-souljagame-game-consoles
SouljaGame unboxing and teardown showing the packaging:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fo-qNU7Qu3k
Rerez video reviewing the console SouljaGame was based on, showing the console list:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZqXuAuTFXpA#t=595
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In September 2005, Nintendo re-released the Game Boy Advance SP with an improved backlit screen and a model number of AGS-101 (vs. the original frontlit version with model number AGS-001). The button that turned the light on and off on the original model instead switched the brightness between low and high and provided no ability to turn the light off on the new model. Even on low though, the brightness of the new model exceeded that of the original.