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Shagger

Remember when Nintendo Downgraded a Console for Censorship? No, Well Here's the Story.

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I actually started writing this post on a topic that @Patrik entitled Fixes that make no sense, but still fixed your game, but I soon realised that it was going a little to far off topic. I still think this is a killer story that apparently few people know about, especially for some of the older gamers and retro gamers like @The Blackangell, so I decided to finish the post anyway and share it as a new thread. This is the story of how I believe censorship forced Nintendo to downgrade thier console to some of thier customers.

 

The world is divided in many ways. In terms of technology, one of the ways the world is divided is by the Analogue Colour Encoding system engineered for television sets and video recorders. This splits the world into three regions, PAL NTSC and SECAM. Any gamer around in the 80's and 90's will know this system all too well, but is not as immediately prevalent with the more region free gaming world we have now. The map below shows what countries are set to what.

 

1920px-PAL-NTSC-SECAM_svg.thumb.png.e968fdaea142e010cbca92eb51b1c5db.png

 

I live in the UK, so as you can see that is in the PAL region. Back in the day, without having the right game copy for the right console to go with the right TV in the right part of the world, it simply wouldn't work. There is a lot of stuff to say about this system on it's own, but with the basics covered I'll just get to the point.

 

In the 70's/80's (at least where I grew up), most game consoles connected to your TV through the same kind of connection you would use for an aerial (Called an AF Socket). The NES was like that, for example.

 

rearPorts.jpg.e14d4d442e404bd98f1c11821d49ff0c.jpg

 

In the 90's, things moved on to other types of connections such as AV, SCART and Super Video that would offer stereo sound and a better, more stable picture. The SNES had such connectivity, more specifically an AV slot (The rectangular port near the middle of the console). This is a step up, as you would expect with a next generation console.

 

l12.thumb.jpg.66d6c6058c9c7b4b3c109173a464fd96.jpg

 

For reference sake, this is what an AV cable looks like. The slim, black connecter at one end to go into the console with the three other cables to connect to the TV being Right Audio, Left Audio and Video.

 

s-l300.jpg.0fc8b796fd46090a91287870554415e7.jpg

 

This is where things, and by that I mean Nintendo, get weird.

The next system was the Nintendo 64, one of my very favourite consoles ever and I'd defend it to hills, but the process of connecting it to your TV was a bit bizarre. It had an AV slot, just like the SNES (The port numbered 1 in this picture. The massive recess containing port 2 was to hold the power brick. I guess Nintendo didn't want a brick on the power cable itself but still wanted it easily removed from the console for this design, but whatever);

 

nintendo-62-n64-back-ports-how-gametrog.thumb.jpg.9c58e70fca150b104bcb74b4d431b8b8.jpg

 

And this port was thier on the PAL version of the console, but you couldn't connect it to your TV with as AV cable like you could with the SNES because it wouldn't work, Instead you got this fun little bugger included with your console;

 

25435_5a96de44453ea5.78173078_N64_20RF_20Adapter_large_0c80bb93-980d-44d4-b143-364c5b96a4c6.jpg.539840940b49f64d38bb6cf0f878823e.jpg

 

And what was it for you ask? To convert the AV socket so you could plug in an AF Aerial cable into your console then plug that into your TV. Like we were doing with the ATARI 2600 and NES over a decade earlier... yeah... As far as I know, this "feature" was exclusive to the PAL version of the console. Everybody else got to use an AV cable akin with the SNES. In fact, it was literally the exact same AV cable. This is like if PAL region PS4 owners were forced to use a SCART cable to connect thier PS4's to thier TV's whereas everyone else got to use HDMI.

 

Why did they do this?

Well, look back at the map I posted and you will notice that Australia is part of the PAL region. Australia was, and in many ways still is, something of a nanny state when it comes to video games. The Australian authorities weren't very happy that games and versions of games that they didn't approve off were being played in that country. People were able to buy these games simply by making trips oversees to the likes of America, Japan, the Philippines and Indonesia to buy them during the life cycles of the NES and SNES. These places were cheap to get to and/or were frequent travel spots for Australians anyway, so this was economical. It didn't matter the games were region coded, people found ways to break them quite easily on those consoles despite Nintendo's best efforts.

 

Fearing this happening again, not to mention fearing the Australian authorities, Nintendo came up with a cunning idea. The messed around with the video output of the PAL console so it had far less electrical resistance as the other versions. This resulted in a video signal that would oversaturate your TV, showing as almost entirely white screen, making the AV cable useless. The converter box itself was also designed to not let the 60Hz signal from an NTSC or SECAM game pass through it, only the 50HZ signal based tech' of a PAL copy of the game. So even if the console or game was cracked so a non PAL version of the game could play on said console, it still wouldn't work. You have to admire how clever this really was. So the naughty Aussie gamers with thier naughty foreign games had no choice but to only play the games mummy Australia approved off, and ruined the lives everyone else in the PAL region in the process.

 

Years later, this makes the PAL version of the console a nightmare to hook up to modern TV's. AF signals are just too weak to transmit to them. The signal being transmitted to the screen refreshes slower than the screen itself creating a "flash" between static and the game signal. You still can't use the AV cable either because of how the console was tampered with. An AV cable that's been specifically modified to have the same electrical resistance on the video output as the audio outputs (only the video output was tampered with buy Nintendo) will allow the console to actually work. I learned this the hard way trying to get my N64 to work a few years ago.

 

So that's the story. I can only imagine what would happen if Nintendo or any game company tried to pull this shit today. I actually believe that the only got away with it back then because the internet, at least as we know it, didn't really exist. I did successfully verify this a few years back but I remember it being a nightmare to do so, I can't remember how and I just can't be bothered doing so again. But of course, if any of the things I've said are incorrect please tell me.

Edited by Shagger
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I can't say for any region other than my own (NTSC) but the adapter wasn't released here in the states. We had the same cable for the N64 that we had for the SNES. They were identical. And the SNES also had the option of hooking up with the same cord the NES used. The only difference was power cords. And considering the size of gaming interest and the varying styles of game play in the North American market, we had no issue getting any of the games that were released anywhere else in the world. To be honest, as kids, none of us even understood the region codes or what they were for. We just wanted our damn games to work for once without having to perform brain surgery on them.

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A lot of people don't understand that there is a lot of locked things. Like China has it's own firewall, USA bans some stuff for Europe, Europe bans some USA things (rarely mostly it's China bans them XD) but still a lot of people don't understand that the Internet is slowly closing down :S

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2 minutes ago, Shole said:

A lot of people don't understand that there is a lot of locked things. Like China has it's own firewall, USA bans some stuff for Europe, Europe bans some USA things (rarely mostly it's China bans them XD) but still a lot of people don't understand that the Internet is slowly closing down :S

I have to disagree there. The internet will never close down. Things may slow down in the eyes of some people who only use a small portion of it, but the internet is growing and moving faster than ever. It will never slow down or stop growing. It is a permanent fixture in human life, and will be here even after we go extinct, until all power is consumed and the electrical grid shuts down. There is no slowing or stopping the internet.

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2 hours ago, Shole said:

A lot of people don't understand that there is a lot of locked things. Like China has it's own firewall, USA bans some stuff for Europe, Europe bans some USA things (rarely mostly it's China bans them XD) but still a lot of people don't understand that the Internet is slowly closing down :S

Seriously, the deal between USA 🇺🇸 and China 🇨🇳 is what I really don't understand with a lot of aggrieved feelings from both ends, with always looking for a way to punish each other. 

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On 7/8/2021 at 9:22 PM, The Blackangel said:

A lot of it just came up in the last 4 years with all the tariffs and sanctions placed on China by Adolf. Not all of it, as we have never really been the best of friends, but a huge amount of it is due to him.

Although I'm sure that some of the reasons why those bans were placed on them was well justified in most cases. 

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We never got that adapter piece in this side of the world and I would've remembered it because I had purchased mine in the US while I was there on vacation. As a matter of fact, there were a few other Nintendo accessories we never got over the years and I only learned of them much later.

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5 hours ago, killamch89 said:

We never got that adapter piece in this side of the world and I would've remembered it because I had purchased mine in the US while I was there on vacation. As a matter of fact, there were a few other Nintendo accessories we never got over the years and I only learned of them much later.

I don't really know if I ever got all the gaming accessories of my last Playstation 4. It's not the company's fault but mine alone. 

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