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Difference between revisions of "PC-FX"

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===Release===
 
===Release===
 
===Legacy===
 
===Legacy===
The PC-FX was considered by the Japanese public to be an expensive and underpowered system. Its lack of native 3D capabilities put it at a disadvantage against the [[sega:Sega Saturn|Sega Saturn]] and Sony's PlayStation which had debuted in the same holiday season, and the console was largely shunned by third-party developers. Only a hundred thousand units were produced as opposed to the millions of PC Engines, and the system did not leave Japan in any form, with even NEC citing price as a concern in Western markets.
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The PC-FX was considered by the Japanese public to be an expensive and underpowered system. Its lack of native 3D capabilities put it at a disadvantage against the [[sega:Sega Saturn|Sega Saturn]] and Sony's PlayStation which had debuted in the same holiday season, and the console was largely shunned by third-party developers as a result. Only a hundred thousand units were produced as opposed to the millions of PC Engines, and the system did not leave Japan in any form, with even NEC citing price as a concern in Western markets.
  
 
In early 1998 the console was discontinued, and NEC effectively left the home console business.
 
In early 1998 the console was discontinued, and NEC effectively left the home console business.
  
 
[[Category:PC-FX| ]]
 
[[Category:PC-FX| ]]

Revision as of 16:50, 16 September 2015

Notavailable.svg
PC-FX
Manufacturer: NEC
Release Date RRP Code
PC-FX
JP

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The PC-FX (ピーシー エフエックス) is a video game console created by NEC as a successor to the PC Engine and its many add-ons and derivatives. After a protracted development timeline, it was released in Japan in December 1994.

Hardware

The PC-FX stands as a curious mid-point between traditional early-90s video game consoles and desktop computers (of which NEC already had a healthy stake in with the PC-9800 series line). It resembles a typical upright (albeit smaller) mid-90s PC, however is designed to play video games shipped on CD-ROMs with a traditional, six-button controller - the FX-Pad.

The CD drive is located on the top of the unit (a design also witnessed in the PC-98 SOMETHING), and the console is designed to be expandable. No keyboard was ever manufactured for the PC-FX, meaning it was never suited to traditional office software such as word processing, but a mouse was created in the form of the FX-Mou, primarily used for strategy games.

Technical Specifications

History

Development

Release

Legacy

The PC-FX was considered by the Japanese public to be an expensive and underpowered system. Its lack of native 3D capabilities put it at a disadvantage against the Sega Saturn and Sony's PlayStation which had debuted in the same holiday season, and the console was largely shunned by third-party developers as a result. Only a hundred thousand units were produced as opposed to the millions of PC Engines, and the system did not leave Japan in any form, with even NEC citing price as a concern in Western markets.

In early 1998 the console was discontinued, and NEC effectively left the home console business.