That's good to hear!
I won't pretend I haven't thought about loading up an everdrive and burning a stack of ISOs then letting a lot go. The truth is I don't play it near enough, but at the end of the day I'm a victim of nostalgia. It's worth it because I still grin like an idiot in my game room.
That’s the interesting part...
with flash carts (specifically everdirves since they seem to have really fine-tuned it all) in any gaming library it adds a interesting dimension.
-With a flash cart you can browse a games entire library without ever having to swap out the game from the system.
-That relegates a gamer's library as a show piece as its regular and active use could become stagnate.
-Many gamers say "I just want to play the game on original hardware." Then with the ever drive and a original system that effectively accomplished just that. Theoretically eliminating the need to collect, store, or buy the games in a systems library.
I understand some buy the flash cart to test out games that are pricy then make a more informed choice on purchasing it. Makes sense, but still doesn't eliminate the fact that buying the physical copy is no different then the meth you are playing it as you are still using original hardware (no emulation).
I fear that once I do pick up everdirves for each of my systems I'll end up leaving my games untouched sitting on shelves looking pretty but never being used. But I also cannot deny the desire, usefulness, and practicality of a flash cart.
For those who have a everdrive (be it for the TG-16 or other systems, and still collect for said system what are your thoughts?
Do you still take a game off your shelf that is already on the flashcart and play it?
Or has the flashcart become a perminite fixture on your system?