@GTV reviews the Cosmic Fantasy 1-2 Switch collection by Edia, provides examples of the poor English editing/localization work. It's much worse for CF1. Rated "D" for disappointment, finding that TurboGrafx CF2 is better & while CF1's the real draw, Edia screwed it up...
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The "real" 'Super Graphics' system - Huge Controller - [OS by Hudson Soft]

Started by SGX Engine, 01/07/2016, 03:30 PM

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SGX Engine


Psycho Punch

This Toxic Turbo Turd/Troll & Clone Warrior calls himself "Burning Fight!!" at Neo-Geo.com
For a good time reach out to: aleffrenan94@gmail.com or punchballmariobros@gmail.com
Like DildoKobold, dildos are provided free of charge, no need to bring your own! :lol:
He too ran scripts to steal/clone this forum which blew up the error logs! I deleted THOUSANDS of errors cause of this nutcase!
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PCEngineHell

The star field in the background is missing on stage 1. Even the Pc-Engine could draw stars. X68000 is therefor much fail.

CrackTiger

No, here's the real 'Super Grafx' system, playing many of the games supported by the Huge Controller:
Justin the Not-So-Cheery Black/Hack/CrackTiger helped Joshua Jackass, Andrew/Arkhan Dildovich and the DildoPhiles destroy 2 PC Engine groups: one by Aaron Lambert on Facebook, then the other by Aaron Nanto!!! Him and PCE Aarons don't have a good track record together! Both times he blamed the Aarons and their staff in a "Look-what-you-made-us-do?!" manner, never himself nor his deranged/destructive/doxxing toxic turbo troll gang which he covers up for under the "community" euphemism!

elmer

Holy Super Shocker, Batman ... a ¥369,000 home computer has better graphics hardware than a ¥39,800 games console!!!

Do you think that I can expect the same sort of difference between a $1,700 Alienware Area-51 desktop verses a $5 Raspberry PI-zero???

What's interesting to me is less about how good the X68000 was (though I'm looking forward to eventually receiving one), but rather just how great the SuperGrafx was for it's time and price, and how we never got the opportunity to see it's capabilities really stretched in the CD-ROM and Arcade Card era.