Of course, I certainly believe the PCE was a pioneer in consoles.
Random thoughts (please help clarify/correct any misconceptions):
1. While the Zelda cartridge (Famicom/NES) was, I think, the first to use a battery to save progress in a console game, the PCE's solution (a central location for saving both HuCard and CD-ROM media, via the CD-ROM hardware or
back-up devices) is a
much more elegant, and flexible solution.
2. I love the Nomad, but it was ~5 years later (end of the Genesis life cycle) and, to quote myself (forgive the enthusiasm):
Now, I love the Nomad, but even Sega-philes will admit that the huge, bulky size of the Genesis cart was not amenable to the demands of a truly portable system. The slim HuCard format, on the other hand, was well-suited for use in a handheld. TurboExpress had built-in rapid-fire switches (a requisite for shooters and a convenience for many other genres) and featured the nicest LCD screen of its era. And, if you purchased TurboVision, the optional UHF / VHF tuner, not only would you get the best TV-on-a-handheld experience (superior even to that of Sega's later Nomad), but you could use TurboExpress' LCD screen as a monitor! That's right: TurboVision provided A/V input, so nothing prevented you from hooking-up your VCR, video camera, LaserDisc, NES, Sega Master System, Genesis, etc. to the TurboExpress and using it as a portable monitor!
I used the TE as a monitor for other devices, including the Sega-CD and 3DO
, when an extra TV wasn't available. Apparently, I was
desperate to play some video games.
3. My own
limited research suggests that the PCE was the FIRST console to ever have a thorough, updated catalog of releases available on electronic media. I guess we can throw all the CD-ROM multi-media (i.e. Ultra Box) into this category.
4. Following #3: PCE first console to have DEMOs distributed? (i.e.
Dragon Slayer, Mooks)
5. This is, perhaps, a DUBIOUS claim: TG-16 + TurboBooster = SEXIEST FORM FACTOR EVER*
* It is so corny to use terms like "form factor", but I am a victim of the tech press.