Category: Tater News

  • CATii Frontend Announced, Immediately Declares War On iiSU

    📰 New article from Retro Handhelds

    CATii Frontend Announced, Immediately Declares War On iiSU

    https://retrohandhelds.gg/catii-frontend-announced-immediately-declares-war-on-iisu/

    So CATii just dropped—announcing itself as the “AI-free” savior of dual-screen emulation… while its promo video looked like it was generated by a bored AI on caffeine. 🤖💥

    The developer, arthie, went full culture-war mode on iiSU, calling it “a mess of AI,” only for Reddit users to immediately point out CATii’s own UI and video had all the hallmarks of AI-generated fluff. Irony? More like a mirrored selfie in a funhouse.

    But here’s the twist: CATii isn’t just another launcher. It’s a single-process, RetroArch-meets-Stremio beast where you tap to install NES or Dreamcast cores like ordering a coffee. No 200 menus. Just “boom, play.” Plus, cloud sync for saves and settings? That’s actually kinda smart—if it works.

    The real question isn’t whether AI helped build it… but will it run? The promise is huge: unified, simple, family-friendly. But history’s littered with “revolutionary” emulators that vanished after a demo reel.

    We’re skeptical. But hey—if arthie delivers even half of what’s promised, we’ll be first in line. Just maybe… don’t post the AI-generated hype video again? 😉

  • Mangmi Air X Review: A Budget Banger

    📰 New article from Retro Handhelds

    Mangmi Air X Review: A Budget Banger

    https://retrohandhelds.gg/mangmi-air-x-review/

    Let’s be real: for under $90, you shouldn’t get a handheld that feels like it was designed by humans. But Mangmi’s Air X? It somehow pulled it off.

    Forget specs on paper—this thing feels good. The contoured grips? Perfect for long gaming sessions. The 1080p screen? A luxury in this price bracket. And the controls? Clicky, comfy, and surprisingly precise—no aftermarket mods needed.

    Sure, the Snapdragon 662 isn’t a beast. Dreamcast? Maybe. PS2? Good luck. But PSP? Pure bliss. N64? Smooth as butter. For the budget crowd, it’s not about crushing every emulator—it’s about nailing the classics without compromise.

    And here’s the kicker: Android 14 runs clean, updates roll in, and Mangmi’s actually talking to Linux devs. GammaOS is coming. That’s rare for a $90 gadget.

    Sure, the Kinhank K56 has more raw power. But does it feel like a real handheld? Nah. The Air X nails ergonomics, software, and charm—all while costing less than your monthly coffee habit.

    If you want a no-nonsense, plug-and-play retro rig that doesn’t suck? This is it.

    TL;DR: The best $90 handheld you can buy right now. Even if your GPU cries.

  • Virtual Boy For Switch Online Pre-Orders

    📰 New article from RetroRGB

    Virtual Boy For Switch Online Pre-Orders

    https://retrorgb.com/virtual-boy-for-switch-online-pre-orders.html

    You heard right: Nintendo’s finally letting us relive the glorious red-lit nightmare that was the Virtual Boy — and this time, it’s on Switch.

    For $100, you can get a full plastic replica that looks like it crawled out of 1995. For $25, there’s a cardboard version that somehow still delivers the 3D “magic” (read: eye strain). Both require a paid Switch Online membership — no free trials allowed. Yep, you’ve got to shell out $20 just to play a 30-year-old console’s 10-game library. But hey, at least it’s not $300 for a working original VB.

    The real win? Nintendo didn’t just cash in — they gave budget gamers a way in. And if you’re weirdly nostalgic for monochrome 3D, this is your moment.

    But here’s the missed opportunity: Why no physical “Best Of Virtual Boy” cartridge? Or better yet — why not let indie devs release homebrew games with true 3D mode for this thing? Games like Tetris Attack VR or The Legend of Zelda: The Minish Cap 3D (wait, that’s not real… yet) could make this accessory legendary.

    Maybe next time, Nintendo won’t just resurrect the past — they’ll let us improve it. Until then, I’m pre-ordering both. And yes, I’ll be building a head strap. You’re welcome, future me.

  • Weekly Roundup #491

    📰 New article from RetroRGB

    Weekly Roundup #491

    https://retrorgb.com/week491.html

    Hey there, retro fanatics — your weekly dose of vintage tech magic is here, and it’s weirdly wonderful.

    First up: magnetically shielded PC speakers. Yes, they’re a thing now. Because why let your CRTs go mad from stray magnetic fields when you can have peace… and 80s synth tunes?

    MiSTerAddons dropped a new DAC that makes your old consoles sound like they’re being serenaded by angels in a velvet-lined arcade. Meanwhile, the Dreamcast’s VMU Pro is getting a Spring 2026 batch — because nothing says “future nostalgia” like pre-ordering a tiny memory card three years in advance.

    OldUnreal is stepping up to keep UT2K4 alive — yes, that 2004 shooter you swore off after the server died. Good news: it’s coming back with love, not rage.

    And if you’ve ever stared at a wireless composite video setup and whispered, “There’s gotta be zero lag,” well… there is now. Zero. Lag. It’s like magic, but with wires.

    Also? Lu’s MiSTer updates just dropped a whole new universe: Apple IIGS, CD-I FMV, Atari 8-bit — basically a time machine in your HDMI port.

    And yes, they made a 3D analogue TV that looks like it fell out of 1995 and into your living room. Perfect for yelling at your kids… who weren’t even born yet.

    Support the channel if you’re obsessed. Or just buy your coffee through their link. Either way — you’re basically a patron of the retro renaissance now. 🕹️☕

  • Rampant U.S. Piracy is a Multibillion-Dollar Concern for Japanese Manga Publishers

    📰 New article from TorrentFreak

    Rampant U.S. Piracy is a Multibillion-Dollar Concern for Japanese Manga Publishers

    https://torrentfreak.com/rampant-u-s-piracy-is-a-multibillion-dollar-concern-for-japanese-manga-publishers/

    Let’s be real: if your favorite manga site is free, someone’s losing big—$55 billion big.

    Japan’s got a dream: turn Naruto and Demon Slayer into the next Toyota. By 2033, they want $133 billion in global sales from anime and manga. But there’s a glitch: the U.S., where 317 million monthly visits go to pirate manga sites. That’s not just fans being lazy—it’s a full-blown revenue hemorrhage.

    Here’s the kicker: a report claims U.S. piracy cost publishers $4.5 billion last month. How? By assuming every hour spent on pirate sites = two paid manga volumes. Yeah, it’s a stretch. Real fans might’ve never bought those anyway. But when your government’s comparing manga to car exports, you don’t need perfect math—you need a scary number. And $55 billion? That’s a bullhorn.

    Even weirder: Cloudflare, Google, and Namecheap are now in the crosshairs. A Japanese court just ruled Cloudflare liable for not doing enough to stop pirate sites. The company cried foul—calling it a threat to the internet’s backbone. Publishers? They’re shrugging. “If your CDN helps pirates, you’re part of the problem.”

    The takeaway? In Japan’s Cool Japan saga, piracy isn’t just a tech issue—it’s a national security-level export threat. And the U.S.? We’re not just reading manga… we’re funding it with free clicks.

  • GammaOS Next Comes to Anbernic RG476H, RG Slide, and Others

    📰 New article from Retro Handhelds

    GammaOS Next Comes to Anbernic RG476H, RG Slide, and Others

    https://retrohandhelds.gg/gammaos-next-comes-to-anbernic-rg476h-rg-slide-and-others/

    If you thought GammaOS Next was just a fancy update for the RG DS… think again. This isn’t a holiday gift—it’s a full-blown handheld revolution, and Anbernic’s entire lineup just got a serious upgrade.

    GammaOS Next has now landed on six Anbernic devices—including the RG476H, RG Slide, and RG406V—along with nearly 20 other handhelds like the Retroid Pocket and ZPG A1 Unicorn. And no, this isn’t just “another Android skin.” It’s a full system overhaul: Black Frame Insertion for buttery-smooth motion, HDMI docking mode that auto-resizes your screen, and a built-in audio tuner called GammaEQ. Want to remap buttons? Done. Need deep sleep or DC dimming? Already there.

    Even better—you can pick “Full” (with Google Play) or “Lite” (no bloat). And yes, it’s all built on LineageOS, so you’re not just getting bells and whistles—you’re getting performance.

    But here’s the catch: to grab these builds right now? You gotta join Gamma’s Patreon. First-month exclusivity, folks. Think of it as paying for a VIP backstage pass to the future of handhelds.

    If you own any Anbernic or compatible device… this isn’t optional. It’s the upgrade you didn’t know you were begging for.

  • Xbox Prototype Follow-Up

    📰 New article from RetroRGB

    Xbox Prototype Follow-Up

    https://retrorgb.com/xbox-prototype-follow-up.html

    You know that feeling when you spend months building a perfect replica of something… only to realize the real thing is even cooler? Yeah. Tito from Macho Nacho Productions lived it.

    After his jaw-dropping video recreating the all-metal Xbox prototype from scratch, he didn’t just sit back and admire his work—he went straight to Microsoft HQ. With help from Ken (yes, that Ken from “What’s Ken Making”), Tito got to hold, touch, and geek out over the actual 2001 prototype. No CGI. No 3D scans. Just raw, dusty, legendary hardware.

    And honestly? It’s like watching a historian uncover the Holy Grail of gaming. The weight, the texture, the vibes—it’s not just a console. It’s a time machine.

    The follow-up video? A masterclass in passion meets precision. If you loved the first one, this is the sequel your inner modder didn’t know they needed.

    Modders. Historians. Xbox fans. Go watch both. Then go hug your old console. You earned it.

  • The Engineering Behind Flash Carts

    📰 New article from RetroRGB

    The Engineering Behind Flash Carts

    https://retrorgb.com/the-engineering-behind-flash-carts.html

    You ever wonder how those sleek little “Flash Carts” trick your old NES, SNES, or Genesis into thinking they’re holding a real 1992 cartridge? Spoiler: it’s magic. Well, engineering magic.

    Ken from What’s Ken Making breaks down the sneaky genius behind ROM carts — not just how they read data off chips, but how modern devices like Everdrives mimic the exact timing, memory mapping, and even quirks of original hardware. It’s like a digital impersonator mastering the voice, walk, and weird laugh of your childhood hero.

    He dives into enhancement chips too — those little add-ons that made games like Star Fox or Super Mario RPG feel like next-gen miracles. Turns out, modern carts have to replicate those too… or risk your game freezing mid-boss fight. Yikes.

    If you’ve ever stared at a flash cart like it’s a black box full of tiny wizards, this video is your backstage pass. No jargon overload — just clear, curious, and genuinely cool breakdowns of the tech you’ve been using since you were 8.

    Pro tip: Watch it with a controller in hand. You’ll appreciate every pixel more.

  • Game Console R36H ProMax Review: Is Good Enough Still Good Enough?

    📰 New article from Retro Handhelds

    Game Console R36H ProMax Review: Is Good Enough Still Good Enough?

    https://retrohandhelds.gg/game-console-r36h-promax-review/

    Let’s be real: another RK3326 handheld? Again?

    The Game Console R36H ProMax is basically your favorite coffee shop’s “same latte, different cup” moment—same chip, same OS (ArkOS 2.0), same punchy 4.2” screen that somehow still looks better than your old Game Boy Advance. It’s not revolutionary. It’s not even surprising. But it works.

    The design? Surprisingly comfy. The back has a faux-exhaust look (yes, really), the buttons are no-frills but reliable, and the speakers—taped to the board, mind you—are louder than they have any right to be. The 3500mAh battery lasts longer than your motivation on a Monday morning, and the WiFi? Finally, no more USB cable yoga just to update your ROMs.

    But here’s the kicker: for $50, it’s hard to justify over cheaper clones—or even an Anbernic RG34XX if you want style. And yeah, some units arrive with loose buttons or dead batteries. It’s a budget device. You get what you pay for… and sometimes, you get a little less.

    Bottom line: If you’re new to handheld emulation and want a no-brainer starter rig? Solid. If you already own three RK3326 devices? Stick to your collection… and maybe invest in a nice sweater instead.

    P.S. Don’t take it out in the snow. I’m not your dad, but I’m also not wrong.

  • IPTV Pirate’s Bitcoin Booty Sold at Auction For Just Over $1 Million

    📰 New article from TorrentFreak

    IPTV Pirate’s Bitcoin Booty Sold at Auction For Just Over $1 Million

    https://torrentfreak.com/iptv-pirates-bitcoin-booty-sold-at-auction-for-more-than-1m-251209/

    Here’s the punchy, newsletter-ready version:

    He ran a pirate IPTV empire… and then lost his Bitcoin stash in an auction.

    Meet the Swedish guy who turned Viking IPTV into a household name—complete with €75,000 Italian kitchens and 308 BTC in profits. He thought he was untouchable. Turns out, the Swedish authorities had other ideas.

    After a 2024 conviction for copyright crimes (and a cheeky “I made 12 million kronor/year” boast to the press), his stash of 12.7 BTC was seized. Not just any crypto—this was real loot from thousands of subscribers paying in Bitcoin to stream the latest Hollywood blockbusters… for free.

    The kicker? He appealed. Then he dropped it.

    So Sweden’s Enforcement Authority did what any good government does with digital bootleg cash: auctioned it off. And boom—$1.02 million in one go. A record for crypto seizures in Sweden, they’re calling it.

    No movie studios got paid. No victims compensated. But the Swedish state? They just bought a fancy new crypto wallet.

    Moral of the story: If you’re gonna pirate, at least don’t leave your Bitcoin in a wallet with your name on it. Or buy a kitchen before you cash out.

    (Word count: 198)