![]() ![]() RGB also available through the MultiAV port. All have built-in Composite and S-Video ports. It has a 2x CD Drive that cuts down on load times, but it's very expensive and doesn't make that big of a difference. The second has a top loader, the most common model available. The first one has a mechanical CD tray, only released in Japan. ![]() While it was technically almost identical to the Neo Geo, and most of its titles were ports, all of those had rearranged CD-based soundtracks it also had a handful of exclusives, as well as some MVS ports that the original AES didn't get. Still, its main problem was the bad timing: the 5th generation had already begun, and it was clear that a pure 2D console could not compete for much longer. Well, you get what you pay for: it was plagued with annoying loading times (say, up to a minute between each round of a fighting game), and it came with a gamepad instead of the badass Neo Geo arcade-style controller. The Neo Geo CD was released four years later, to offer the same games at a much lower cost. The Neo Geo was truly a beast in 1990, but that came with a price tag: $650 for the AES console and past $200 for each game. "Don't cross the line unless you're serious." ![]()
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