Polymega's been in the oven for quite some time now, and, like so many new hardware projects, has been subject to a few growing pains. This ambitious system is aiming to be the ultimate retro box, allowing you to not only use your original games and controllers but also download your games to internal storage to create an all-in-one solution for your vintage gaming needs. A series of replaceable modules offer support for a wide range of platforms, and there's even going to be an online store which will allow you to legally purchase retro titles direct from the rights holder.
Getting such a major project off the ground was never going to be easy; sure enough, the Polymega project took some flak early on for omitting FPGA and confidently claiming that it had the notoriously difficult Sega Saturn emulation nailed down – some of that criticism was answered, but there was always the question about if the system would hit its proposed 2019 launch date.
That big question has now been answered as the team behind Polymega has revealed that, while pilot production has commenced, the system won't be arriving until early next year. "The timeline for shipping is ASAP," says an update on the official Polymega site. "But realistically, we expect to have your console en route in the next 90 days (end of February)."
While that's not ideal news, it's hardly surprising as the company has been pretty quiet for much of the latter part of 2019. However, on the positive side, a list of compatible games has been issued which makes for pretty encouraging reading; the system is said to be "over 90% compatible" with each system's official release libraries and testing has been going on all year to document compatibility with Polymega's BIOS replacements.
The other big news involves the system's Virtual Display screen filters, which can be tinkered with quite dramatically and can be saved either globally or on a game-by-game basis. Then we have what the team at Polymega is calling "Intelligent Game Patching", which allows you to apply patches to titles and treat them as separate games, essentially running multiple versions of the same title. Oh, and a small analogue stick has been added to the RGC01 Lightgun, which will allow you to navigate the console's UI when using the controller, amongst other things.
While some of Polymega's more passionate critics have labelled the system 'vapourware', it would seem that this dream system is indeed going to make it into the hands of consumers, even if it's a little later than we'd like. Suffice to say, we'll be going hands-on with it the moment our unit arrives. Did you place a pre-order? Let us know with a comment below.
This article was originally published by nintendolife.com on Mon 9th December, 2019.
[source polymega.com]
Comments 37
it looks incredible but too expensive for me
It's basically a super expensive rom dumper and emulator platform.
All of these things can be had for massively less cost elsewhere.
Plus the Mister is superior to this in every way.
It's probably not exactly vapourware... yet. But there's already the RetroFreak, and the Retron 5 in this market, and no real need for another proprietary emulator/rom dumper.
The lengthy delays are why I purchased two Analogue systems and RetroUSB's AVS. Their compatibility is 100%
So how much does that thing cost exactly ?
@KitsuneNight it says $299usd on their website. Which to me seems a little too much for just the base console not including the separate modules.
@derickw69
That's actually a lot less then I expected.
I expected $499 and up.
No FPGA makes this a no go for me. I've had a Retro USB AVS since launch. It's been one of my favorite retro purchases and the difference between it and software emulation is vast. Not even Nintendo's official emulation comes close. My next HD retro system will be from Analog. I've had my eye on their SNES for a while and their recent Gameboy announcement has me excited.
@KitsuneNight
It's free if you keep posting articles about it on NintendoLife
Hold on, still publiadvertising for this scam?
Got the check, NL?
Vapor ware at its finest...
every 5 months or so , a delay AND a new unexpected cool feature...
that’S NOT how you gain trust or make business...
They think we are stupid.
I still don't think this thing is going to deliver. That it's either going to be complete vapourware and hit more 'unexpected delays' or it will ship and not do what they say it will.
Oh, no way they miss their 25th deadline and take additional promised features away.
Quite surprised by the price, thought I'd have to sell all my retro stuff to get it. Just most of it now.
Not sure this system will ever come out. Looks brilliant but the price is pretty high. I have the original consoles a Retron 5, Retro Trio 3, Raspberry pi tech for my retro needs. Still I will keep an on this.
I had a pre-order for this but I got bored of waited and cancelled. They've just delayed it too many times. Perhaps it will finally come out someday, and I wish them all the best, but Analogue deliver, which is why I've spent my retro funds with them.
It's never going to be released in the way they claimed.
It's already gone from an FPGA to emulation, expect that to get worse.
This will end up being an ARM SoC or a really cheap x86 part, a USB to game card adapter in a crappy plastic case and the implementation will be terrible. It will just use already existing emulators.
I'll be placing an order once the system makes it out into the wild
When they can't even give us an exact launch date, then there's bound to be more problems or delays.
This article says they have started production.
They have NOT.
On their Facebook page they just said they are still finalising the final build before commencing production.
Why is the article telling porkies -did they tell you a different story or did you mis-read their release?
This is important considering these guys have had shocking communication, many delays and are saying shipping in 2 months when production has t even started.
We need you to be critical questioning journalists, not their PR people!
If the 90% compatibility covers all the games I want, I'll definitely consider this. I hope it can play Golden Axe: The Duel and Nintendo Puzzle Collection.
I have too many multiplatform physical games to not get this for a modern Television in a all in one unit. I wont preorder anything until its physically available however.
I wanted to get one with the TG16 module. However, it just get way too expensive after conversion to CAD plus ridiculous shipping rate. Might as well just buy an original TG16...will be cheaper.
No FPGA = No Purchase
I don't see a reason for a(nother) hardware for emulation (which is, by definition, far from the original game experience).
@NoPhysicalNoBuy
If they are too negative (realistic) about the system, they won't get the free review unit they have been angling for for years
No thanks. What a waste of time.
@DinnerAndWine I don't know. I love nintendolife, but EVERY SINGLE ARTICLE related to polymega seemed like an ad. This was supposed to release on April Fools for gods sake.
@illsellyoursoul
Yeah, this thing has so many questions and negativity surrounding it, from the console itself to how it's been marketed/social media, it's kind of pathetic how NL sucks up to them and doesn't question anything.
Lol they think software emulation is superior to FPGA hardware emulation x3
@bolt05 Oh look another cynic. Guess the product isn't for him.
@sleepinglion OK, so you spent $600 and won't be able to play TurboGrafx, PlayStation, Saturn, and NEO-GEO CD games? And you already need 3 HDMI ports? Delays aside, this is still worth waiting for.
@KevvyLava it's not cynical to dislike something. Instead of flaming me you could contribute to the discussion. You are the definition of a forum troll.
@bolt05 Find me a rom dumper that has the features of this, for all of these consoles, with the interface, modules supporting original controllers, and rom hacks. And neither of the products you mentioned cover even what the base unit offers in the form of CD-based games. You couldn't even make accurate comparisons, which is pretty disappointing for someone named after a Disney movie. Another internet troll rushing to judgment. This product is clearly meant for the versatile every-gamer, not for the few people that are going to build a Mister or Pi. What the Retron 5 is missing (accurate emulation, low input lag), the Polymega has pretty much proven it can deliver on (and that's not coming from me, it's coming from places like RetroRGB). Now, mass-producing a product...THAT's the question. And can it hold up over time? And can they deliver the support? THOSE are substantive topics. Comparing it to a Retron 5 is puts you in the category of the clowns who always say "LOL I CAN BUY A RASPBERRY PI FOR $35!!!!!!" Thank you and goodnight.
@KevvyLava I emulate those just fine. I only wanted systems to play my old cartridges again
This device was supposed to release in April of 2019 and has been delayed numerous times...It's a scam. I called them out on all the lies they told and they blocked me on Twitter... why? because I spoke the truth and when you speak the truth the liars are usually the ones that start to block consumers from social media handles because I'm hurting their business exposing the truth. DO NOT GIVE THEM MONEY, TRUST ME. I've watched this company botch 2 pre-order dates on their website, they are a joke.
@ramu-chan Exactly! I got my refund too after they delayed it like a 100 times. They are full of crap.
One more thing before I forget, these crooks at Polymega will take your money when you preorder the device, you get charged and not charged when your unit ships but charged the minute you preorder they take your money... I have friends that have forked over north of $400 to Polymega and still haven't received anything. F**K this company.
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