Check out this $150 FPGA-based PlayStation
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You may recognize Taki Udon from his retro gaming YouTube channel, but last year he started a company to manufacture gaming hardware, including a much-cheaper variant of the DE10 board behind the popular open-source MiSTer FPGA project you can read all about my beloved MiSTer here and he hasnt slowed down since.After a series of teases, Udons Retro Remake imprint has taken the wraps off of its FPGA-powered PlayStation clone, called the SuperStation One. The MiSTer-based console starts at just $149.99 for pre-orders, in what is being billed as a Founders Edition, with subsequent pricing having a hard cap of $225 (also visible in this image of the store page). If you want that SuperSpecial price, pre-orders open at the following times, on the Retro Remake store:Los Angeles: 6 p.m. PST on Saturday, January 25New York: 9 p.m. EST on Saturday, January 25London: 2 a.m. GMT on Sunday, January 26Hong Kong: 10 a.m. HKT on Sunday, January 26Sydney: 1 p.m. AEDT on Sunday, January 26More times here Mark your calendars.It would be uncharacteristic of me to not have this in transparent blue. Should we make it? Taki Udon (@takiudon.bsky.social) 2025-01-23T08:30:25.483ZThe SuperStation One is a custom MiSTer device, housed in a plastic shell that certainly evokes the vibes of the original PlayStation (or, perhaps, the PSOne would be more accurate). While the device will run any of the MiSTers myriad cores, its the projects PSX_MiSTer core that takes center stage here. Coupled with original PlayStation controller and Memory Card ports on the front of the device, and a bevy of other inputs and outputs befitting any MiSTer project, and the SuperStation One makes a compelling alternative to the MiSTers often confusing assembly of hubs and hats and SDRAM and SNAC adapters. With built-in analog output, USB, NFC, wifi, Bluetooth, and SNAC support, Udons console has de-dongled the MiSTer to a really impressive degree.Theres even a power button! (MiSTer users know. )Then theres the question of how you get games on the thing. Retro Remake has teased a separate attachment called the SuperDock, which houses a CD/DVD drive, four USB A ports, and a 2280 m.2 SSD bay, and which appears to fit neatly beneath the SuperStation One.While no pricing has been announced yet, pre-order deposits will be available for $5 alongside a SuperStation One purchase. The design for the SuperDock (D) is almost done. CD/DVD drive, four USB A ports, and a 2280 m.2 SSD bay. Taki Udon (@takiudon.bsky.social) 2025-01-22T00:17:20.685ZIf youd rather skip loading real discs, or would prefer to do what I did and embed small NFC stickers into your cases, the SuperStation One comes equipped with an NFC reader so you can use Zaparoo (ne TapTo) to load games, giving you that tactile console experience. Normally, how you get the ROMs that youll be tapping onto the device is a process best left unspoken, but Udon spoke to the excellent folks at Time Extension about the SuperDocks capabilities here.Thankfully, saving games is split from the media, and our SNAC ports give us the direct ability to load and save games without needing to use cartridge-based workarounds. That just leaves you with how to handle the CD itself. On a stock core with a stock system, it is possible to store your games on an internal SSD via a simple process. Whenever you use that CD in the future, the stock system will call the stored backup and load the game without you needing to do anything.This is a great solution for those of us with large PS1 disc collections, where you could rip your own ROMs, and load them upon disc insertion, or (presumably) NFC tap if youd prefer. While theres still a large open question for how these changes apply upstream to the MiSTer project, its certainly compelling from a user experience standpoint.If all of this reminds you of Analogues excellent clone consoles, well yeah, this is a direct competitor to what Analogue has been up to. While Analogues products are beautiful and simple compared to the complexities of a MiSTer build, they lack the flexibility and Tinker Factor that the MiSTer has. They also lack much to the frustration of many of its customers and fans of its name analog output for CRT support, which the SuperStation One will support. Analogue hasnt gotten around to a PlayStation core yet; its first CD-based system was 2023s excellent, but niche, Analogue Duo and up next is the Analogue 3D, a 4K Nintendo 64 clone which should be shipping this quarter. As much as Ive enjoyed all of Analogues projects, its exciting to see some more competition in this space.
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