Mega Drive region converter cartridges

From Sega Retro

The Sega Mega Drive was Sega's first console to offer games which were region locked, i.e. cartridges which can only be played on specific regional hardware. To overcome this problem one solution was to use a Mega Drive Region Converter.

From a Sega perspective there are three "main" regions - NTSC-J, the format used for consoles in Japan, NTSC-U, the format used in North America, and PAL, used in Europe and Australia. Other regions would pick one of the three formats - Brazil typically went for NTSC-U and Asia used a mixture of PAL and NTSC depending on the country. There are other forms of region locking too - Japanese cartridges are a different shape than their western counterparts and won't physically fit in some consoles (similar to the "region locking" of the Sega Master System).

Traditionally this means a game intended for use with a North American Sega Genesis could not work on a European Sega Mega Drive. There are, in fact, many exceptions to this rule as not all software was region locked on the system, but in many cases there was still an obstruction. Region encoding would generally have a greater impact with the Sega Mega-CD, Sega Saturn and Sega Dreamcast - in the early 1990s few people contemplated the idea of importing games as there were often no easy methods of doing so.

There are no official Mega Drive region converters but numerous unlicensed third party ones. Most typically originate from Asia where there was far less regulation on this sort of thing and numerous television standards between countries. In all cases a region converter is inserted into a Mega Drive system in-between the console and game cartridge, forming a "tower" (and avoiding sizing issues in the process). Some region converters have switches to toggle between regions, while others merely convert to a specific region.

In no cases do Mega Drive region converters solve coding issues. For example, a game designed for 60Hz NTSC televisions will run roughly 17% slower on a 50Hz PAL television due to the difference in refresh rate (and likewise a European game running on an NTSC TV will likely run too fast). Resolutions can also differ - PAL Mega Drives can in theory display 320x240 images while NTSC ones can only achieve 320x224, though very few games take advantage of the extra sixteen rows of pixels.

It should be noted that some devices such as the Game Genie can also act as region converters. More recent consoles by AtGames have region converting features built in (and of course there is always the option of modifying the internals of the console manually.)


Magazine articles

Main article: Mega Drive region converter cartridges/Magazine articles.

Physical scans

Box Name Brand Date & Price Images Documentation
Datel Pro Universal Adaptor MD UK Cover.jpg
Professional Universal Adapter Datel
United Kingdom UK: (≥ 1991)
ProfessionalUniversalAdaptor MD.jpg


UniversalAdapter MD Box.jpg
Universal Adapter Datel
United Kingdom UK: (≥ 1991)
UniversalAdapter MD.jpg


Universal Adapter Datel
United Kingdom UK: (≥ 1991)
UniversalAdapter MD.jpg


NitroAdaptor MD Box Front.jpg
Nitro Adaptor Fire
(≥ 1990)


NitroAdaptor2 MD Box Front.jpg
Nitro Adaptor 2 Fire
(≥ 1990)


MegaKey MD Box Front Freetron.jpg
Mega Key Freetron
(≥ 1990)
MegaKey MD Freetron.jpg


MegaKey MD Box Front Freetron Alt.jpg
Mega Key Freetron
(≥ 1990)
MegaKey MD Freetron Alt.jpg


MegaKey2 MD Box Back Alt.jpgNospine-small.pngMegaKey2 MD Box Front Alt.jpg
Mega Key 2 Freetron
(≥ 1990)
MegaKey2 MD Alt.jpg


MegaKey MD Box Front GD.jpg
Mega Key Gold Dragon
(≥ 1990)


GameAdaptor MD Box Front.jpg
Game Adaptor Honey Bee
(≥ 1990)
GameAdaptor MD.jpg


Game Adaptor(?) Honey Bee
(≥ 1990)
GameAdaptor MD black.jpg


MemoryModule MD TW Box.jpg
Memory Module Megacom
(≥ 1991)


Memory Module Megacom
(≥ 1991)
MegacomMemoryModule MD.jpg


Memory Module Megacom
(≥ 1991)
MegacomMemoryModule MD Back Red.jpgMegacomMemoryModule MD Red.jpg


Japanese Game Converter Prism Leisure
(≥ 1990)


SuperMegaKey MD Box Front.jpg
Super Mega Key Realtec
(≥ 1990)
SuperMegaKey MD.jpg


Video Game Cartridge Converter Realtec
(1992)


CodeBuster MD Box Back.jpgNospine-small.pngCodeBuster MD Box Front.jpg
Code Buster ??
(≥ 1990)
CodeBuster MD Back.jpgCodeBuster MD.jpg


GameAdaptor MD Box Front SE-16B.jpg
Game Adaptor (or Mega Adaptor) ??
(≥ 1990)
GameAdaptor MD Alt back.jpgGameAdaptor MD Alt.jpg
SE-16B
GameAdaptor MD Alt2 back.jpgGameAdaptor MD Alt2.jpg
SE-16B (Alt)


MD Megacom Game Module & Protector Green Box Back.jpgMD Megacom Game Module & Protector Green Box Front.jpg
Game Module & Protector ??
(≥ 1990)
MD Megacom Game Module & Protector Green Back.jpgMD Megacom Game Module & Protector Green Front.jpg


GameModuleandProtector MD Box Front.jpg
Game Module & Protector ??
(≥ 1990)
GameModuleandProtector MD.jpg


GameModule&ProtectorII MD Box Front.jpg
Game Module & Protector II ??
(≥ 1993)


MagicKeyIII MD Box Back.jpgNospine-small.pngMagicKeyIII MD Box Front.jpg
Magic Key III ??
(≥ 1990)
MagicKeyIII MD.jpg


MegaConverter MD KR Box Back.jpgNospine-small.pngMegaConverter MD KR Box Front.jpg
Mega Converter ??
South Korea KR: (≥ 1990)
MegaConverter MD KR Back.jpgMegaConverter MD KR.jpg


MegaConverter MD Box Front.jpg
Mega Converter ??
(≥ 1990)
MegaConverter MD.jpg


MegaConverter MD Box Front Alt.jpg
Mega Converter ??
(≥ 1990)
MegaConverter MD Alt.jpg


MegaDrive Converter ??
(≥ 1990)
MegaDriveConverter MD.jpg


Mega Key ??
(≥ 1990)
MegaKey MD.jpg


Mega Key ??
(≥ 1990)
MegaKey MD Alt.jpg


Mega Key 2 ??
(≥ 1990)
MegaKey2 MD.jpg
MegaKey2 MD back.jpg


Mega Key 3 ??
(≥ 1990)
MegaKey3 MD.jpg


Mega Key (Portuguese) ??
(≥ 1990)
MegaKey MD PT back.jpgMegaKey MD PT.jpg


SuperKey MD Box Front.jpg
Super Key ??
(≥ 1990)
SuperKey MD.jpg
AC-3000


TVGCCC MD box.jpg
TV Game Computer Cartridge Converter ??
(≥ 1990)
TVGCCC MD back.jpgTVGCCC MD.jpg


Bitman Mega Key RU Box Back.jpgNospine-small.pngBitman Mega Key RU Box Front.jpg
Bitman Mega Key Bitman
(≥ 1994)
MegaKey2 MD.jpg
MegaKey2 MD back.jpg


References


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