New CBS Coleco Vision cartridges for my collection.
List of cartridges:
- Antarctic Adventure by ©1984 Konami
- BC’s Quest for Tires by ©1983 Sierra On-Line
- Donkey Kong Junior by ©1982 Nintendo (France Secam Version)
- Miner 2049er by ©1982 Micro Fun/Microlab inc.
- Omega Race by ©1981 Bally Midway
- Pitfall by ©1983 Activision
- Q*Bert by ©1983 Parker Brothers
- Roc’n'Rope by ©1984 Konami
- Schtroumpfs by ©1983 Logiciel (France Secam Version)
- Super Action Football by ©1984 CBS Toys
- Tarzan by ©1984 Edgar Rice Burroughs Inc.
- Tournament Tennis by ©1984 Imagic
- Venture by ©1983 Exidy (France Secam Version)
- Pitstop by ©1983 Epyx
- Looping by ©1982 Venture Line Inc. (France Secam Version)
- Subroc by ©1982 Sega
- Turbo by ©1981 Sega (France Secam Version)
- Cosmic Avenger by ©1983 Universal (France Secam Version)
- Gorf by ©1981 Bally Midway (France Secam Version)
- Zaxxon by ©1982 Sega (France Secam Version)
Special thanks to a friend. He donated this console for spare parts.
Autopsy:
from Wikipedia:
The Expansion Module #2 is a driving controller expansion that consists of a steering wheel, gas pedal and the pack-in game Turbo. The driving controller is also compatible with the games Destructor and Dukes Of Hazzard.
source: wikipedia
Cartridges list:
- Donkey Kong by Nintendo.
- Cosmic Avenger by Universal.
- The Official Turbo by Sega.
- Smurf by Peyo.
click here for the CBS Coleco Vision category.
CBS ColecoVision RGB pinouts only for the French (Secam) AV Out version.
Here my first ColecoVision RGB hack.
source: colecovision.dk
Cartridges list:
- BurgerTime by Data East U.S.A.
- Rocky Super Action Boxing by United Artists Corporation + Joystick Sticker.
- WarGames by United Artists Corporation + Joystick Sticker.
- Buck Rogers by The Dille Family Trust.
click here for the CBS Coleco Vision category.
Autopsy:
from Wikipedia:
Coleco prototyped a fourth expansion module intended to provide compatibility with Mattel’s Intellivision, but this was never released.
Two controller expansions were also available. First was the Roller Controller, a trackball packaged with a port of the arcade game Slither, a Centipede clone and meant to be used with some dedicated games like Victory or to enhance the gameplay of previously published cartridges which benefitted from its trackball system (like Wargames).
The second was the Super Action Controller Set, resembling a pair of boxing gloves each with joystick and numeric keypad on top and a series of buttons along the grip. It came with the game Super Action Baseball and saw later release of the Rocky Super Action Boxing, and a port of Front Line.
source: wikipedia
Autopsy:
from Vintagecomputing:
And you thought video game controllers were over-complicated these days; this one requires five (slightly-pudgy child) hands just to use it properly.
Take a look at this bad boy: four trigger buttons on the pistol-like grip (one per finger), twelve buttons in the overlay-friendly numeric keypad matrix on top, a one-dimensional “speed roller” wheel near the back, and an extremely flaccid red-knobbed joystick crowning it all.
Combine this with the futuristic look of a gaudy black space gauntlet that literally engulfs your hand, and you’ve got the ColecoVision Super Action Controller.
This marvel of controlling technology came in sets of two with a “Super Action Game” included — Super Action Baseball or Rocky Super Action Boxing.
source: vintagecomputing.com
Cartridges list:
- Fathom by Imagic.
- Rocky Super Action Boxing by United Artists Corporation + Joystick Sticker.
click here for the CBS Coleco Vision category.
Autopsy:
from Wikipedia:
Expansion modules, from its introduction, Coleco had touted a hardware add-on called the Expansion Module #1 which made the ColecoVision compatible with the industry-leading Atari 2600. Functionally, this gave the ColecoVision the largest software library of any console of its day.
The expansion module prompted legal action from Atari, but Atari was unable to stop sales of the module because the 2600 could be reproduced with standard parts. Coleco was also able to design and market the Gemini game system which was an exact clone of the 2600, but with combined joystick/paddle controllers.
source: wikipedia
Autopsy:
Cartridges list:
- Mouse Trap by Exidy.
- Zaxxon by Sega.
- Carnival by Sega.
- Lady Bug by Universal.
- Donkey Kong by Nintendo.
click here for the CBS Coleco Vision category.
ColecoVision RGB Hack:
Photo from #3 to #6 explain how to hack the RGB output signal inside the console.
ColecoVision RGB connector pinout:
__________________________________
\ o1 o o3 o o5 o o o8 /
\ o o o o o13 o o15 /
\____________________________/
Pin Signal
1 Red Output
3 Green Output
5 Blue Output
8 Ground
13 Composite Synch
15 Audio Output (very low volume)
Scart RGB pinout:
----------------------------21
_| 19 17 15 13 11 9 7 5 3 1 |
| |
| 20 18 16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 |
----------------------------
Pin Signal Signal level
1 Right Audio Out
2 Right Audio In
3 Left Audio In
4 Audio Ground
5 Ground (blue)
6 Left Audio Out
7 Blue input (0.7V, 75ohm)
8 Function select/AV control (9.5-12V = AV mode, >10kohm)
9 Ground (green)
10 Reserved Data
11 Green input (0.7V, 75ohm)
12 Reserved Data
13 Ground (red)
14 RGB Blanking
15 Red input (0.7V, 75ohm)
16 RGB switching control (1-3V = RGB mode on, 75ohm)
17 Ground (sync signal)
18 Ground (RGB switching)
19 Composite Out
20 Composite Input (Synch) (as in 1Vpp video signal, 75ohm)
21 Common ground (shield)
Autopsy:
Pal Verison here
from Wikipedia:
The ColecoVision is Coleco Industries’ second generation home video game console which was released in August 1982. The ColecoVision offered arcade-quality graphics and gaming style, the ability to play Atari 2600 video games, and the means to expand the system’s basic hardware.
Released with a catalog of twelve launch titles, with an additional ten games announced for 1982, approximately 125 titles in total were published as ROM cartridges for the system between 1982 and 1984.
source: wikipedia colecovision faq
autopsy:
Cartridges list:
- Cosmic Avenger by Universal.
- Gorf by Midway.
- Donkey Kong by Nintendo.
- Mr.Do by Universal.
from Wikipedia:
The ColecoVision is Coleco Industries’ second generation home video game console which was released in August 1982. The ColecoVision offered arcade-quality graphics and gaming style, the ability to play Atari 2600 video games, and the means to expand the system’s basic hardware.
Released with a catalog of twelve launch titles, with an additional ten games announced for 1982, approximately 125 titles in total were published as ROM cartridges for the system between 1982 and 1984.
source: wikipedia
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