It's all about the screen ratio. The Pocket is 10:9, same as the original Game Boy. This way all Game Boy and Game Boy Color games perfectly fit the screen. The Pocket can play GBA, sure, but GBA was 3:2, so it's heavily letterboxed on the Pocket. The Game Bub is a 3:2 screen, while using similar underlying tech of FPGA. Basically, the Game Bub is the right landscape layout and right screen ratio to best play GBA games.
- Posts
- 57
- Comments
- 103
- Joined
- 3 yr. ago
- Posts
- 57
- Comments
- 103
- Joined
- 3 yr. ago
- JumpDeleted
Permanently Deleted
- JumpDeleted
Permanently Deleted
The outcome isn't the same; FPGA devices can read the physical carts. And if the core is made well, it can be indistinguishable from OG hardware, though it's not like we don't have some good emus out there as well. For me, it's like asking why anyone buys imported beer when Coors exists. Sometimes I want something that's made to be a higher grade, and FPGA devices tend to be on the higher end. I'm a collector of games and devices, and the last thing I'm looking for is yet another cheap emulation device. Those are a dime a dozen that market is served. Right now, what the market doesn't offer is an FPGA handheld with a 3:2 screen that can read physical GBA carts, and I'd love to get one as soon as someone makes one.