Is this a real SNES prototype or some homemade shizzle?

Discussion in 'Rare and Obscure Gaming' started by Tyree_Cooper, Jul 18, 2012.

  1. Tyree_Cooper

    Tyree_Cooper Peppy Member

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    The seller told me he bought it many years ago off eBay and doesn't know much about it, except that it's supposed to be a prototype. I only have a SFC hooked up so I haven't tested it yet, but I don't hope for anything else than the normal game.

    I'm not really into protos but I believe they're not supposed to come in small boards like this?

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]
     
  2. Yakumo

    Yakumo Pillar of the Community *****

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    Well, the stckers on it for a start are way too new to be original. looks like a bloody mess to me. I've never seen a prototype cart with wires all over the place.

    Yakumo
     
  3. Tyree_Cooper

    Tyree_Cooper Peppy Member

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  4. sabre470

    sabre470 Site Supporter 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014 & 2015

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    Looks like nice home made fake, really bad soldering job lol. I think Konami had enough money to buy some decent dev carts from Nintendo with proper eprom socket to allow their team not to be soldering instead of developing games.

    I've got an SFC proto cart that Yakumo sold to me years ago, I need to dig out the pictures, I can't recall if there was any soldering job on it?
     
  5. derekb

    derekb Well Known Member

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    yeah that soldering job on the chips is super sketchy
     
  6. Jamtex

    Jamtex Adult Orientated Mahjong Connoisseur

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    What are the 4 digit numbers to the right of the ST logo?
     
  7. APE

    APE Site Supporter 2015

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    There is no way any reputable developer, during the 90s, would make their own test carts without at least socketing the sucker first. For all they know they could be burning EPROMs with worthless data making all of that work pointless. Even the smaller devs who did work on Genesis games bothered to make their own custom PCBs when SEGA didn't offer them anything (think Accolade).

    I've seen (and done) worse. You'd be surprised what looks bad works fine and what looks good sucks hardcore.
     
  8. ASSEMbler

    ASSEMbler Administrator Staff Member

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    Fake. no one puts "proto" on their carts, they put a version number or alpha/beta.

    Fake.
     
  9. Psycho

    Psycho We've gone plaid!

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    Yeah, the stickers definitely aren't original, but there's always the chance the real ones fell off and someone added those later?

    (Not saying I think it's real or anything, just making a comment... :) )

    I'd like to see a closer shot of the chips though, so we can read the numbers. The date codes on the chips would tell a lot (one looks like it might be 9906, that'd be 6th week of 1999, wouldn't it? If that's the case, it's definitely fake.)

    And what are they trying to do with the wires, anyway? I can't quite make that out...
     
    Last edited: Jul 18, 2012
  10. MottZilla

    MottZilla Champion of the Forum

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    Everything is wrong about it. Developers back then didn't bend pins on eproms up like that. They didn't run wires all over. And they wouldn't be using that PCB, particularly for a game that came out in 1995. And the wouldn't write proto on it. However the weird stickers, it's possible the proto had no stickers on it when someone got it. But the other details show that it is most certainly a bootleg. You could check the date code on the eproms too. If they were made after 1995, there is no chance it was a proto.

    There is a tiny chance that it could contain a prototype version but it definitely wouldn't be the original board and eproms. I hope you didn't pay much for it.
     
  11. APE

    APE Site Supporter 2015

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    Mainly address shifting due to EPROMs and the maskrom pinout not matching up 1:1.
     
  12. badinsults

    badinsults Peppy Member

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    It definitely looks like "homemade shizzle". Chances are, someone has thrown on a copy of Vampire's Kiss to make a repro, as the game is quite expensive.
     
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