Manufacturer | Nintendo |
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Type | Portable game console |
Generation | Fifth generation era |
First available | JP July 21, 1995 NA August 14, 1995 |
Discontinued | 1996[1] |
CPU | NEC V810 |
Media | Game Pak (Cartridge) |
Units sold | 770,000[1] |
Nintendo's Virtual Boy (バーチャルボーイ Bācharu Bōi?) (also known as the VR-32 during development) was the first portable game console capable of displaying "true 3D graphics". Most video games are forced to use monocular cues to achieve the illusion of three dimensions on a two-dimensional screen, but the Virtual Boy was able to create a more accurate illusion of depth through the effect known as parallax. In a manner similar to using a head-mounted display, the user looks into an eyepiece made of neoprene on the front of the machine, and then an eyeglass-style projector allows viewing of the monochromatic (in this case, red) image. It was released on July 21, 1995 in Japan and August 14, 1995 in North America at a price of around US$180. It met with a lukewarm reception that was unaffected by continued price drops. Nintendo discontinued it the following year.[1] The Virtual Boy is considered Nintendo's only major failure in the home video game market.
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The system does not have a full 384×224 array of LEDs as a display. It uses a pair of 1×224 linear arrays (one per eye) and rapidly scans the array across the eye's field of view using flat oscilating mirrors. These mirrors vibrate back and forth at a very high speed (they are what produce the mechanical humming noise from inside the unit), and can be damaged if the Virtual Boy is hit, knocked over, or used while in rough motion (such as in a car). A full-size display, while mechanically simpler, would have increased the Virtual Boy's physical size and unit cost to the point where the system would become uneconomical. Every Virtual Boy game has the option to pause automatically every 15–30 minutes to remind the player to take a break, to prevent undue eye strain and possible headaches.
The Virtual Boy is iconic for its monochromatic use of red LED lights. The use of the red LED lights was chosen for being the least expensive, the lowest drain on batteries, and for being the most striking color to see. The use of other LED colors proved to be too cost prohibitive and would have forced the system to retail for over US$500. It would not be until 1996 that high-efficiency indium gallium nitride (InGaN) blue and green LEDs would become available from Nichia Corporation. During development, a color LCD was experimented with but was found to just cause users to see double instead of creating the illusion of depth.
The Virtual Boy, which uses an oscillating mirror to transform a single line of dots into a full field of dots, requires high-performance LEDs in order to function properly. Because each pixel is only in use for a tiny fraction of a second (384 pixels wide, 50.2 Hz scan rate = approximately 52 µs per scanline), high peak brightness is needed to make the virtual display bright and comfortable for the user to view. The two-screen system demanded a fast refresh rate, unlike the original Game Boy which had blurry motion, so using an LCD was not an option.
The Virtual Boy, being a system with heavy emphasis on three-dimensional movement, needed a controller that could operate along a Z-Axis. The Virtual Boy's controller was an attempt to implement dual digital "D-pads" to control elements in the aforementioned 3D environment.
The controller itself is shaped like an "M" (similar to a Nintendo 64 controller). One holds onto either side of the controller and the part that dips down in the middle contains the battery pack. There are six buttons on the controller (A, B, Start, Select, L and R), the two D-pads, and the system's 'on\off" switch. The two directional pads are located on either side of the controller at the top. The "A" and "B" buttons are located below the pad on the right side and the "Start" and "Select" buttons are located in the same spot on the left side. What would normally be called "shoulder buttons" ("L" and "R") are located behind the area where the pads are, on the back of the controller, functioning more as triggers.
In most games for Virtual Boy, like Mario Clash, the directional pads are interchangeable; both do the same thing. For others with a more 3D environment, like Red Alarm, "3D Tetris" or Teleroboxer, each pad controls a different feature. For Red Alarm one directional pad controls pitch and direction of the protagonists' ship, while the other controls forward, back and strafe movement. For Teleroboxer, each control pad, in conjunction with the trigger\shoulder buttons, controls the position of the corresponding fist of the character. For "3D Tetris", The D-pads flip & move the blocks. The symmetry of the controller also allows games like Vertical Force to feature the option to reverse the controls for left-handed people (similar to the Atari Lynx). This kind of concession to left-handed people has been repeated with the Nintendo DS handheld and Wii console.
One of the unique features of the controller is the extendable power supply that slides onto the back. It houses the six AA batteries required to power the system. This can be substituted with a wall adapter, though a "slide on" attachment is required for the switchout. Once the slide on adapter is installed, a power adapter can be attached to provide constant power.
The system's EXT port, located on the underside of the system below the controller port, was never officially supported since no official multiplayer games were ever published, nor was an official link cable released.
Processor | NEC V810 (P/N uPD70732) 32-bit RISC Processor @ 20 MHz (18 MIPS) 1 MB of DRAM and 512 KB of PSRAM (Pseudo-SRAM) 1 KB Cache |
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Display (× 2) |
RTI SLA (P4) 384 × 224 Resolution 50.2 Hz Horizontal Scan Rate |
Power | 6 AA Batteries (9 VDC) or AC Adapter (10 VDC) |
Sound | 16-bit Stereo |
Controller | 6 buttons and 2 D pads uses NES controller protocol |
Serial Port | 8 pin cable |
Hardware Part Numbers |
VUE-001 Virtual Boy Unit VUE-003 Stand VUE-005 Controller VUE-006 Game Pak VUE-007 Battery Pack VUE-010 Eyeshade VUE-011 AC Adapter VUE-012 Eyeshade Holder VUE-014 Red & Black Stereo Headphones |
Weight | 750 grams |
Dimensions | 8.5"H × 10"W × 4.3"D |
128 megabit addressable ROM space (4–16 megabit ROM used in released games) 128 megabit addressable RAM space (0–8 kilobyte Battery Backed RAM in released games) 128 megabit addressable expansion space (unused in any released games) Expansion interrupt available to the cartridge Left and right audio signals pass through cartridge 60-pin connector |
The console was designed by Gunpei Yokoi, inventor of the Game & Watch and Game Boy handhelds. While compact and seemingly portable, Virtual Boy was not intended to replace the Game Boy in Nintendo's product line, as use of the system requires a steady surface, and completely blocks the player's peripheral vision. According to David Sheff's book Game Over, Yokoi never actually had intended for the console to be released in its present form. However, Nintendo had grown impatient with the amount of time that he had taken with the project. It wanted to focus on the Nintendo 64, and quickly rushed the Virtual Boy to market[2].
Hype surrounding the device included public musings by Nintendo that the device might resemble a gun set vertical, projecting a 3D image in the air. The actual device was considered a disappointment compared to this description by Nintendo of America: "Powered by a 32-bit processor, the Virtual Boy produced very impressive 3-D effects, although the monochromatic graphic style proved to limit the appeal of the visuals."[3]
The commercial demise of the Virtual Boy was considered to be the catalyst that led to Yokoi being driven from Nintendo[4], yet it was maintained that Yokoi kept a close relationship with Nintendo[5] despite Yokoi having later created a rivalling handheld system for Bandai. According to Game Over, the company laid the blame for the machine's faults directly on the creator[6]. In 2007 the system was listed as number five in PC World's "The Ugliest Products in Tech History" list.[7] In Dubai, a crate containing 100 sealed Virtual Boys was discovered in a warehouse. Vijay Chandrabota, purchasing manager of Geekay Games, said that it was just left there, and that no one knew it was even in stock, also stating that the Virtual Boy was dead stock, and he wasn't aware of its existence until they discovered it.[8]
Because Nintendo only shipped 800,000 Virtual Boys worldwide, it is a hot collector's item.[8]
Voice-overs for some advertisements were done by Dylan Bruno.[9]
Due to the short lifespan of the system, only 22 games were released. Of them 19 games were released in the Japanese market, while only 14 were released in North America.
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