Do any of you have a broken NES like me?

In General Gaming

What do you play if you're in the mood to play you're NES if it's broken? I need suggestions! Also can you take those two black things out of the connector in the SNES system and use it to play regular NES Games? Guys I should have never took my NES apart should've I!? Now one of those little wires in the nes got smashed when I put it together wrong again... DARN

You can't play NES Games on a SNES without a "convertor". and by convertor I basically mean "NES that plugs into the top of the SNES", because the two systems are almost completely incompatible.

Which "little wire" are we talking about?

and hey, you could always go dig out an emulator for the PC

I know how you feel, i just recently fried the mother board on one f my nes's. Luckily, i had two more to back me up. You can strip that wire, and try resoldering it.

I have a NES that isnt in playing condition cuz im missing the AC Adaptor. Really stinks, i have the money to buy the adaptor, 20$. I could get a new NES for that much but i cant find them.

I was using my nes for two months on i think a 9 volt static ball apapter, and still use it to this day. try getting a adapter off of a phone, but make sure the voltage is close to the nes's POWer.

I believe that the regulator in the NES is fine with anything from 7 to 9 volts.

You can't play NES Games on a SNES without a "convertor". and by convertor I basically mean "NES that plugs into the top of the SNES", because the two systems are almost completely incompatible.

Which "little wire" are we talking about?

and hey, you could always go dig out an emulator for the PC

Where can you find one of these "converters"? Also it was the wire "in" the system that is one that goes to the main board or something like that. It was one of those little colored ones. Also I don't have a PC right now.



Most 9 volt adapters are closer to 10V I think. So maybe the NES can take 7-10 volts?

A 9V adapter should be easy to find. The problem may be one that can provide 1A. If I remember correctly, the NES adapter is rated at 1A, but I'm not sure if the NES actually needs it. Also, make sure the adapter you use has the correct polarity on the barrel. Negative sleeve, positive center!

So, if you find a 9V adapter that provides 1A current and has a negative sleeve barrel, it should be all you need.