Analogue Pocket review: The world’s best Game Boy Advance

Analogue Pocket review: The world’s best Game Boy Advance

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The 2019 reveal of the Analogue Pocket feels like a lifetime ago yet, despite that, it still feels unreal to actually have one in hand. Yes, some of that is phantom pains from the Pocket’s own delays on top of the delays of this year’s other handhelds, the Steam Deck and the Playdate, on top of a global pandemic, a historic chip shortage, and any number of supply chain fiascos. But Analogue’s most ambitious project is here, it’s real, and it largely meets (and in some ways even exceeds) my expectations. It’s also not quite done, but we’ll get into that.

The Analogue Pocket is a handheld retro gaming clone, built using FPGA (field-programmable gate array) technology. That means the guts of the Pocket are designed to be reconfigured to clone whatever hardware they’re programmed to, with an obsessive emphasis on accuracy. In this case, the Pocket can emulate a host of handheld gaming consoles from the entire Game Boy / Color / Advance lineup to less common portable consoles like the Sega Game Gear, Atari Lynx, and even the Neo Geo Pocket Color. While the Game Boy games will all work with the Pocket’s cartridge slot, the other three require cartridge adapters similar to how Analogue’s Mega SG handled other cartridge formats.

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