Difference between revisions of "Game Boy Advance"

From Sega Retro

 
(5 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
{{ConsoleBob
 
{{ConsoleBob
| | logo=Gameboy advance logo.svg|320px]]
+
| logo=Gameboy advance logo.svg
 
| consoleimage=GameBoyAdvance.png
 
| consoleimage=GameBoyAdvance.png
| imgwidth=320
 
 
| name=
 
| name=
 
| maker=[[Nintendo]]
 
| maker=[[Nintendo]]
 
| variants=Game Boy Advance SP, Game Boy Micro
 
| variants=Game Boy Advance SP, Game Boy Micro
| add-ons=
 
| processor=
 
 
| releases={{releasesGBA
 
| releases={{releasesGBA
| gba_date_us=2001-06-11
+
| gba_date_us=2001-06-11{{ref|1=https://web.archive.org/web/20010609222807/http://www.nintendo.com/news/news_articles.jsp?articleID=3950}}
 +
| gba_rrp_us=99.95{{ref|1=https://web.archive.org/web/20010609222807/http://www.nintendo.com/news/news_articles.jsp?articleID=3950}}
 
| gba_date_eu=2001-06-22
 
| gba_date_eu=2001-06-22
 +
| gba_date_au=2001-06-22
 
| gba_date_jp=2001-03-21
 
| gba_date_jp=2001-03-21
 
}}
 
}}
Line 29: Line 28:
  
 
==List of Sega games for the Game Boy Advance==
 
==List of Sega games for the Game Boy Advance==
{{multicol|
+
{{BulletPointGameList|GBA}}
''<DPL>
 
category=Game Boy Advance games
 
notnamespace=category
 
ordermethod=title
 
order=ascending
 
</DPL>''
 
|cols=3}}
 
  
 
===By region===
 
===By region===
Line 53: Line 45:
 
*[[List of Game Boy Advance games in the United Kingdom]]
 
*[[List of Game Boy Advance games in the United Kingdom]]
 
*[[List of Game Boy Advance games in the United States]]
 
*[[List of Game Boy Advance games in the United States]]
 +
 +
==Other Game Boy Advance games also released for Sega systems==
 +
{{NonSegaList|GBA}}
  
 
==Gallery==
 
==Gallery==
Line 61: Line 56:
  
 
==Promotional material==
 
==Promotional material==
 +
===Game Boy Advance===
 
<gallery>
 
<gallery>
 
NintendoSpaceworld2000PressDisc GBA BLUE&ORANGE.png
 
NintendoSpaceworld2000PressDisc GBA BLUE&ORANGE.png
Line 68: Line 64:
 
GCGBAMediaInformation agb fucshia front 01.png
 
GCGBAMediaInformation agb fucshia front 01.png
 
GCGBAMediaInformation agb platinum angle 03.png
 
GCGBAMediaInformation agb platinum angle 03.png
 +
</gallery>
 +
 +
===Game Boy Advance SP===
 +
<gallery>
 +
NintendoHolidayPressCD2003 All GBA SP Colors 1.jpg
 +
NintendoHolidayPressCD2003 All GBA SP Colors 2.jpg
 +
NintendoHolidayPressCD2003 Cobalt and Platinum GBA SP.jpg
 +
NintendoHolidayPressCD2003 Onyx and Flame GBA SP.jpg
 +
NintendoHolidayPressCD2003 Flame GBA SP 1.jpg
 +
NintendoHolidayPressCD2003 Flame GBA SP 2.jpg
 +
NintendoHolidayPressCD2003 Onyx GBA SP.jpg
 
</gallery>
 
</gallery>
  
Line 73: Line 80:
 
<references />
 
<references />
  
[[Category:Non-Sega consoles]]
+
{{NonSegaConsoles}}

Latest revision as of 17:50, 22 February 2022

Gameboy advance logo.svg
GameBoyAdvance.png
Game Boy Advance
Manufacturer: Nintendo
Variants: Game Boy Advance SP, Game Boy Micro
Release Date RRP Code
Game Boy Advance
JP
Game Boy Advance
US
$99.9599.95[1]
Game Boy Advance
EU
Game Boy Advance
AU

The Game Boy Advance (ゲームボーイアドバンス) or GBA is a handheld video game console released by Nintendo in 2001. It is a successor to the Game Boy line of handhelds, and was Nintendo's handheld platform of choice before the release of the Nintendo DS in late 2004.

Overview

The Game Boy Advance stands as one of Nintendo's most successful handheld systems, remaining virtually uncontested throughout its run (competitors included the short-lived Neo Geo Pocket Color by SNK and various iterations of the WonderSwan by Bandai) thanks to then-cutting edge technical might (for a handheld, anyway) and its large array of third-party backers. The GBA is fully backwards compatible with earlier iterations of the Game Boy, though is now held sideways, has a widescreen display and adds L and R buttons.

The Game Boy Advance was an extremely profitable venture for Nintendo, sporting high build quality, a large library of games and importantly for handhelds, a long battery life. Original models did not have backlit screens, something which was addressed in the late 2003 release of the flip-top Game Boy Advance SP, and the unsuccessful cost-cut Game Boy Micro (which cannot play older Game Boy/Game Boy Color games), released in 2005.

Sega Support

Contrary to popular belief, the Game Boy Advance was not the first Nintendo console to be supported by its old rival, Sega, but the company did make a strong impact with the likes of ChuChu Rocket!, Super Monkey Ball Jr. and the much anticipated Sonic Advance shortly after the system's launch. Roughly fifty games were published by Sega for the system in total, most of which were co-published by THQ in the west due to various financial and logistical issues.

Some of Sega's output, such as Crazy Taxi: Catch a Ride, is said to have pushed the Game Boy Advance hardware to the edge, and other big properties came to the system in the form of Jet Set Radio, Space Channel 5: Ulala's Cosmic Attack, Shining Soul and Sega Rally Championship.

Like most third-party publishers, Sega quickly moved to Nintendo DS development at the quickest opportunity, with support drying up entirely by late 2006/early 2007.

List of Sega games for the Game Boy Advance

By region

Other Game Boy Advance games also released for Sega systems

Gallery

Promotional material

Game Boy Advance

Game Boy Advance SP

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) | ColecoVision (1982) | PC Engine (1987) | R-Zone (1995) | Game.com (1997) | WonderSwan (1998) | Neo Geo Pocket Color (1999) | N-Gage (2003) | LeapFrog Didj (2008) | Stadia (2019)