Difference between revisions of "Super Nintendo Entertainment System"

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The North American SNES was different in aesthetic from the original design used by the Japanese Super Famicom and the European SNES, but they are otherwise identical from a technical perspective, and so on Sega Retro are treated as one system.
 
The North American SNES was different in aesthetic from the original design used by the Japanese Super Famicom and the European SNES, but they are otherwise identical from a technical perspective, and so on Sega Retro are treated as one system.
  
The SNES was the successor of the [[NES]]. The SNES was also the main rival of the [[Sega Mega Drive]], during what is often known as the 16-bit era. See ''[[Sega Mega Drive/Hardware comparison (Super NES)]]'' for a technical comparison between the SNES and Mega Drive hardware, as well as ''[[Blast processing]]'' for related North American marketing campaigns.<section end=intro />
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The SNES was the successor of the [[NES]]. The SNES was also the main rival of the [[Sega Mega Drive]], during what is often known as the 16-bit era. See [[Sega Mega Drive/Hardware comparison (Super NES)]] for a technical comparison between the SNES and Mega Drive hardware, as well as [[blast processing]] for related North American marketing campaigns.<section end=intro />
  
 
==Sega support==
 
==Sega support==
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==List of Sega games for the Super Famicom==
 
==List of Sega games for the Super Famicom==
 
*''[[Columns]]'' (1999)
 
*''[[Columns]]'' (1999)
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==Other Super NES games also released for Sega systems==
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{{NonSegaList|SNES}}
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Latest revision as of 03:24, 12 September 2023

SuperNintendoEntertainmentSystem logo.svg
SuperNintendo.jpgSuperFamicom.jpg
Super Nintendo Entertainment System
Manufacturer: Nintendo
Release Date RRP Code
Super Famicom
JP
1990-11-21 ¥25,000 ?

The Super Nintendo Entertainment System (SNES), originally released in Japan as the Super Famicom (スーパーファミコン) is a video game console originally released in 1990 by Nintendo.

The North American SNES was different in aesthetic from the original design used by the Japanese Super Famicom and the European SNES, but they are otherwise identical from a technical perspective, and so on Sega Retro are treated as one system.

The SNES was the successor of the NES. The SNES was also the main rival of the Sega Mega Drive, during what is often known as the 16-bit era. See Sega Mega Drive/Hardware comparison (Super NES) for a technical comparison between the SNES and Mega Drive hardware, as well as blast processing for related North American marketing campaigns.

Sega support

Only one game from Sega was available on the Nintendo system; Columns. In 1999 Media Factory were allowed to make a version for Nintendo's Japan-exclusive Nintendo Power rewritable cartridge service.

List of Sega games for the Super Famicom

Other Super NES games also released for Sega systems

References


Non-Sega consoles
Nintendo
Nintendo Entertainment System (1983) | Game Boy (1989) | Super Nintendo Entertainment System (1990) | Nintendo 64 (1996) | Game Boy Color (1998) | Game Boy Advance (2001) | Nintendo GameCube (2001) | Nintendo DS (2004) | Wii (2006) | Nintendo 3DS (2011) | Wii U (2012) | Nintendo Switch (2017)
Sony
PlayStation (1994) | PlayStation 2 (2000) | PlayStation Portable (2004) | PlayStation 3 (2006) | PlayStation Vita (2011) | PlayStation 4 (2013) | PlayStation 5 (2020)
Microsoft
Xbox (2001) | Xbox 360 (2005) | Xbox One (2013) | Xbox Series X (2020)
Mobile
iOS | Android | Windows Phone
Other
Atari 2600 (1977) | Intellivision (1979) | ColecoVision (1982) | Atari 5200 (1982) | PC Engine (1987) | CD-ROM² (1988) | Super CD-ROM² (1991) | R-Zone (1995) | Game.com (1997) | WonderSwan (1999) | Neo Geo Pocket Color (1999) | N-Gage (2003) | LeapFrog Didj (2008) | Stadia (2019)