Skip to content
WARNING: SYSTEM LAZY // ARCHIVE NEO TOKYO NEO SANTIAGO // DO NOT FEED THE CONSOLES // WARNING: SYSTEM LAZY // ARCHIVE NEO TOKYO NEO SANTIAGO // DO NOT FEED THE CONSOLES // WARNING: SYSTEM LAZY // ARCHIVE NEO TOKYO NEO SANTIAGO // DO NOT FEED THE CONSOLES // WARNING: SYSTEM LAZY // ARCHIVE NEO TOKYO NEO SANTIAGO // DO NOT FEED THE CONSOLES // WARNING: SYSTEM LAZY // ARCHIVE NEO TOKYO NEO SANTIAGO // DO NOT FEED THE CONSOLES // WARNING: SYSTEM LAZY // ARCHIVE NEO TOKYO NEO SANTIAGO // DO NOT FEED THE CONSOLES // WARNING: SYSTEM LAZY // ARCHIVE NEO TOKYO NEO SANTIAGO // DO NOT FEED THE CONSOLES // WARNING: SYSTEM LAZY // ARCHIVE NEO TOKYO NEO SANTIAGO // DO NOT FEED THE CONSOLES // WARNING: SYSTEM LAZY // ARCHIVE NEO TOKYO NEO SANTIAGO // DO NOT FEED THE CONSOLES // WARNING: SYSTEM LAZY // ARCHIVE NEO TOKYO NEO SANTIAGO // DO NOT FEED THE CONSOLES //
Home Museum Nintendo Entertainment System
Nintendo Entertainment System
Nintendo

Nintendo Entertainment System

1983

About

The console that saved gaming. After the 1983 crash, Nintendo's Famicom (NES in the West) revitalized the industry with Super Mario Bros., The Legend of Zelda, and countless classics.

Technical Specs

Cpu
Ricoh 2A03 @ 1.79 MHz
Ram
2 KB
Vram
2 KB
Media
Cartridge
Sound
5 channels (2 pulse, 1 triangle, 1 noise, 1 DPCM)
Display
256x240 resolution, 54 colors

Advertisement

Quick Stats

Release July 1983
Discontinued August 1995
Type Home
Games 714
Units Sold 62

WE NEED COFFEE