Difference between revisions of "KW-503"
From Sega Retro
Lukdriver14 (talk | contribs) |
Lukdriver14 (talk | contribs) |
||
Line 27: | Line 27: | ||
==Promotional material== | ==Promotional material== | ||
+ | {{gitem|Songa2 ad.jpg|AR Songa II print advert}} | ||
+ | {{galleryPrintAd | ||
+ | |VAD 10 RU Dendy.jpg|vad|10| | ||
+ | }} | ||
<gallery> | <gallery> | ||
− | |||
Dendy TV advert RU.mp4|RU advert (1994) | Dendy TV advert RU.mp4|RU advert (1994) | ||
Dendy TV advert RU 2.mp4|RU advert (1994) | Dendy TV advert RU 2.mp4|RU advert (1994) |
Revision as of 09:51, 2 February 2019
KW-503 | |||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Manufacturer: Songa | |||||||||||||||
|
The Songa II is an unlicensed Sega Mega Drive console released in Brazil and Argentina. It was the successor to the Songa I, though is mostly identical aside from the new case design. It was also released as the MG-16R (a presumed successor to the MG-16) by Electrolab, Pro 16 Bit (succeeding a previous "Pro 16 Bit") by Steepler and Super Bitman by Bitman which also had a version modeled on KW-501. The Songa II shipped with wireless six-button gamepads, and is fully compatible with the Sega Mega-CD.
Gallery
Promotional material
AR Songa II print advert
Print advert in Video-Ace Dendy (RU) #10: "xxxx xxxx" (1994-07-28)
RU advert (1994)
RU advert (1994)
Physical scans
Mega Drive, (Songa II) |
---|
|
References