Platform: Arcade
World Heroes
Super Mario Bros. 2
Dimahoo
Dance Dance Revolution 2ndMix
Asterix (Arcade)
Sound Voltex III: Gravity Wars
SoulCalibur
Gladiator
Dragon's Lair
Densha de GO!
Double Dragon 3: The Rosetta Stone
Forgotten Worlds
RoboCop 2
Sega Rally 2
The King of Fighters '95
Xevious
Virtua Fighter
Guilty Gear Xrd: Revelator
Missile Command
Mike Tyson's Punch-Out!!
Gimmick: Exact Mix
Tekken 5
The King of Fighters '94
Alien vs. Predator
Marvel vs. Capcom: Clash of Super Heroes
F-Zero
The King of Fighters 2000
Arkanoid
The King of Dragons
Zaxxon
Star Gladiator Episode I: Final Crusade
ActRaiser
Ghouls 'n Ghosts
OutRun
Tetris: The Grand Master
Solar Fox
BeatStream
Smash T.V.
San Francisco Rush 2049
Dungeons & Dragons: Shadow over Mystara
The Fast and The Furious
Crazy Taxi
Dance Dance Revolution A
Beatmania IIDX 27 Heroic Verse
Pac-Man
Dance Dance Revolution A3
Guilty Gear: Strive
Momoko 120%
Alien Front Online
Soul Blade
subdirectory_arrow_right Sega Game Gear (Platform), Super Nintendo Entertainment System (Platform), Sega Master System/Mark III (Platform), Game Boy Advance (Platform), Game Boy (Platform), PlayStation (Platform), Sega Mega Drive/Genesis (Platform), Neo Geo AES (Platform), Game Boy Color (Platform), Nintendo Entertainment System (Platform)
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In 2018, rapper Soulja Boy attempted to sell his own line of video game consoles, collectively called the SouljaGame line, sold for $149.99 for a console and $99.99 for a handheld. Advertising claimed that the consoles would be compatible with a variety of consoles' games, including modern platforms like the PlayStation Vita, Nintendo 3DS, and Nintendo Switch. These, quite obviously, did not have such compatibility, but rather were a generic retro emulator console one could find on small business-oriented retail websites such as Wish and AliExpress loaded with pirated and modified games from the Neo Geo; NES; Game Boy Advance; Game Boy Color; Game Boy; Sega Genesis; SNES; Master System; Game Gear; and PlayStation libraries sold at a markup. The only difference from these pre-existing consoles being a photograph of Soulja printed onto the box. Soulja Boy would eventually stop selling SouljaGame consoles, with the website for the console redirecting to Nintendo's 3DS website.
Soulja Boy selling SouljaGame line article:
https://variety.com/2018/gaming/news/soulja-boy-selling-cheap-consoles-1203084022/
Soulja Boy ends sales of SouljaGame line article:
https://www.ign.com/articles/2019/01/02/soulja-boy-stops-selling-souljagame-game-consoles
SouljaGame unboxing and teardown showing the packaging:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fo-qNU7Qu3k
Rerez video reviewing the console SouljaGame was based on, showing the console list:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZqXuAuTFXpA#t=595
https://variety.com/2018/gaming/news/soulja-boy-selling-cheap-consoles-1203084022/
Soulja Boy ends sales of SouljaGame line article:
https://www.ign.com/articles/2019/01/02/soulja-boy-stops-selling-souljagame-game-consoles
SouljaGame unboxing and teardown showing the packaging:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fo-qNU7Qu3k
Rerez video reviewing the console SouljaGame was based on, showing the console list:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZqXuAuTFXpA#t=595
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Dottori-Kun, a 1991 demake of Sega's 1979 maze game Head-On, was created not to be played, but rather as a legal loophole around Japan's Electrical Appliance and Material Control Law which claimed that all arcade machines must contain a game when sold. Dottori-Kun allowed Sega to sell generic Astro City arcade machines which the arcade owner could swap the contents of at their leisure, and included test features to ensure the machine worked properly before installing a proper game. The game did not support coin insertion, and therefore was not a viable option for arcades even if an owner believed there was an audience for its simplistic gameplay and graphics, leading to the board being scrapped most of the time.