As the video says, it doesn’t provide all the functionality that the Analogue Pocket has, but it’s a very good alternative for a decent price!
Oh for sure, I just reshelled and revamped my Dreamcast, I’m in the mood for the gameboy. Waiting for another limited release from analogue is just frustrating for me
Yeah, I hate that Analogue releases are limited. If you miss the window, you either missed it forever or are willing to pay obscene prices on eBay 😞
It looks like $103 +shipping for the kit plus case (some assembly required), not bad.
Okay but does the FPGA scratch your cartridges? Don’t see so. Analogue wins again.
The article poising this as an analogue competitor seems naive.
It doesn’t have any of the things people buy an analogue pocket for. If you want to say, “This is an analogue pocket but cheaper and without any of the features,” sure. But so is a regular gameboy with an lcd mod.
Which is really what this competes with. It competes with mods of original gameboys.
Honestly the 1600x1440 screen on the Analogue Pocket and the ability to drive it is what you’re paying for when you buy it.
There’s not going to be a device that can drive all those pixels at less than the Analogue Pocket’s price for some time yet. Sure, none of the Game Boy systems used anywhere near that many pixels, but the fact that the Analogue Pocket screen is so ridiculously pixel dense it can emulate the original attributes of the OG screens from the devices that their FPGA is mimicking means you’re going to pay a premium for that (or any) device doing full hardware replication at that level.
Honestly seeing the Analogue Pocket emulate the way that the original DMG GameBoy screen pixels seemed to slightly hover over the background (slightly casting a shadow) was mind-blowing. You can’t get that unless your screen actually has those original pixel attributes or you’ve built a display with enough resolution to emulate what those characteristics looked like. See: https://cdn.arstechnica.net/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/PXL_20211213_155424062.jpg (Seriously, zoom in and notice the mimicry of the shadows under darker pixels, it’s just crazy to see in person.)
What do you mean by drive it?
The chips that are powering and sending information to the screen.
What do people buy it for?
- the screen is amazing and unique.
- the filters in combination with the screen creates an incredibly authentic but also high quality and artifactless experience
- the dock allows for a switch experience of playing on the go and also on a tv with a controller
- the open fpga platform allows you to play games from dozens of consoles and handheld and even more arcade pcbs
I have a Pocket in my draw but the screen got wrecked by the sun and now I don’t know what to do about it.
I “built” a Game Boy SP from parts found on eBay. If you can take your Pocket apart enough to get a part number, try googling for a replacement, should be a simple as plugging in a ribbon cable.
Replace the screen or upgrade it with an lcd
Analogue has always been massively overpriced for the actual features and build quality.
This plays Game Boy and Game Boy Color games and you have to build it yourself.
Analogue Pocket comes preassembled and plays Game Boy, Game Boy Color, and Game Boy Advance out of the box, plus Game Gear, Neo Geo Pocket, NGP Color, and Lynx with adapters. If jailbroken it plays pretty much anything from a card. And Analogue OS has a ton of options, what are you talking about?
I’m glad we have more FPGA consoles coming out; after all, the RetroUSB AES is better and cheaper in many ways than the Nt Mini. But Analogue also created the market and is constantly pushing the envelope on technology. Analogue builds good products and this Game Boy Color alternative sounds great too.
I’m well aware of how the Analogue Pocket works. I’m also claiming it is not worth it for most people, and that the build quality is indeed quite bad for the price.
constantly pushing the envelope on technology.
They’re leaders in panel quality, I don’t think any other project came close to sourcing such a good display. But that’s it. They’re not constantly pushing the envelope, they use pretty standard FPGAs that have been perfected by other people, their software is basic, the features are nothing special. It’s good, but “constantly pushing the envelope on technology.” is not true.
if jailbroken
Adding 3rd party emulators, including those that load from the SD card, is a fully supported feature and is very easy to do.
Also they’ve put some effort into making the graphics mimic the GB/GBA model of your choice but brighter with the LCD screen.
At the time it came out, not really. There wasn’t really anything else to compete with it. If I’m not mistaken, it was the first handheld FPGA console.
Here is an alternative Piped link(s):
https://piped.video/ho_Ntx0Fd7U
Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.
I’m open-source; check me out at GitHub.
But will it have support?
There’s a million cheaper raspberry Pis clones out there, but without the support they get nowhere near the popularity of the Pi.









