• Long-Lost NES Game Xcavator Announced At Day Of The Devs

    📰 New article from Retro Handhelds

    Long-Lost NES Game Xcavator Announced At Day Of The Devs

    https://retrohandhelds.gg/long-lost-nes-game-xcavator-announced-at-day-of-the-devs/

    You know that feeling when you spend years trying to get your side hustle noticed… only for the world to ignore it? Meet Chris Oberth, 1991’s OG indie dev who made a clever little NES puzzle game called Xcavator—and got zero bites from publishers. His prototype? Boxed up. Source code? Dusty. Dreams? Deferred.

    Fast forward 34 years: Oberth passed away, his family donated the code to the Video Game History Foundation, and a ragtag crew of retro heroes—Mega Cat Studios, Retrotainment Games, and iam8bit—decided it was time to resurrect this forgotten gem. Using 1991-era tools to stay true to the original vision, they finished what Oberth started. No modern polish. Just pure, unfiltered NES charm.

    Now, Xcavator 2025 is real—and it’s not just a game. It’s a museum piece you can play. For $100, you get a gray NES cartridge, a 14-page doc detailing its wild journey, and the knowledge that every dollar after costs goes straight to saving other lost games from digital oblivion.

    Frank Cifaldi of the foundation summed it up: “The world wasn’t ready in 1991.”

    Turns out, we are now. And maybe—just maybe—we owe it to the pioneers to finally press play.

    Pre-orders close Jan 10, 2026. Don’t let history stay buried.

  • Philips / Magnavox CDi 450 / 550 Power Supply

    📰 New article from RetroRGB

    Philips / Magnavox CDi 450 / 550 Power Supply

    https://retrorgb.com/philips-magnavox-cdi-450-550-power-supply.html

    If you own a Philips or Magnavox CDi 450/550, you’ve probably stared at its weird ethernet-looking power cable and wondered: “Who designed this?” Probably someone who thought “future-proof” meant “unreplaceable.”

    Good news: Zaxour just dropped a game-changing replacement power supply that nixes the fragile, hard-to-find “inline brick.” Now you just plug in a standard 12V/2A wall wart (like the Triad models linked) and connect it via a short Ethernet cable. Boom—no more hunting eBay for dying PSUs.

    You can buy the whole kit for $50, or go DIY with the “naked” version for $35. Pro tip: Use a super short Ethernet cable (they recommend 0.5ft). Why? Because these things are finicky, and long cables = voltage drop = console tantrums.

    If your CDi’s power brick still works? Congrats. But seriously—buy this anyway. These units are 30 years old. When it dies, you’ll thank your future self for not scrambling in the dark with a multimeter and a prayer.

    TL;DR: CDi owners, this is the power supply upgrade you didn’t know you needed… until now.

  • New Firmware Updates for Saturn ODEs Fenrir, SAROO

    📰 New article from RetroRGB

    New Firmware Updates for Saturn ODEs Fenrir, SAROO

    https://retrorgb.com/new-firmware-updates-for-saturn-odes-fenrir-saroo.html

    Ever tried playing Shining Force III on your Sega Saturn… only to have it stubbornly refuse because the B button doesn’t work? Yeah, welcome to the wild world of Saturn ODEs.

    This weekend, two beloved Sega Saturn optical drive emulators got long-awaited updates. First up: Fenrir Lite. After months of users hitting a wall with Fenrir Loader Kai failing to load games from SD cards, creator Ced dropped a fix—then spent 48 hours fine-tuning it with Discord users until it was butter-smooth. Now? B button works. Games load. Peace returns to the Saturn faithful.

    Meanwhile, SAROO dropped version 0.8—and it’s a party. CD+G audio CDs? Check. Two-player controller support? Double check. Plus, it now reads .cdg/.sub files (just name them like your .cue file and you’re golden). TPUnix also warned: don’t mix this firmware with YZB’s—they’re like iOS and Android. Same phone, different OS.

    It’s 2025, and we’re still geeking out over Saturn emulators with more passion than most modern consoles get. And honestly? We wouldn’t have it any other way. 🎮✨

  • Scammers Mimic Cloudflare’s ‘Error 451’ Site Blocking Notice to Infect Pirates

    📰 New article from TorrentFreak

    Scammers Mimic Cloudflare’s ‘Error 451’ Site Blocking Notice to Infect Pirates

    https://torrentfreak.com/scammers-mimic-cloudflares-error-451-site-blocking-notice-to-infect-pirates-251211/

    Here’s your punchy, newsletter-ready summary:

    When Cloudflare blocks pirate sites, scammers don’t just watch—they strike.

    UK pirates hit with a wave of Cloudflare blocks last month thought they’d found a workaround. Instead, they got a fake “Error 451” page—mimicking Cloudflare’s official site-blocking notice—to trick them into downloading malware.

    The bait? A shoddy clone of Cloudflare’s legal-blocking page, complete with a suspicious “Thank you for your !” (yes, that exclamation mark is weird). The site—Flixerplus—looks legit enough to fool tired, frustrated users scrolling past ISP and VPN blocks. But behind the scenes? Iframes, shady scripts, and background calls to sketchy domains. No antivirus flags yet… which means it’s flying under the radar.

    This isn’t just phishing—it’s psychological hacking. Scammers are exploiting a moment of digital confusion: when users expect to see blocks, they stop questioning them. And now, fake blocks are the new front door for malware.

    Cloudflare hasn’t commented. The domain? Still live. And if you’re hunting free movies in the UK right now… maybe just rent one.

    Bonus tip: If a “legal notice” looks off, it probably is. Hover before you click.

  • AYANEO Pocket Play Revealed: A Modern Twist on the Xperia Play

    📰 New article from Retro Handhelds

    AYANEO Pocket Play Revealed: A Modern Twist on the Xperia Play

    https://retrohandhelds.gg/ayaneo-pocket-play-revealed-a-modern-twist-on-the-xperia-play/

    Forget foldables—2026’s hottest gadget might just slide into your life.

    AYANEO, best known for ultra-cool handhelds like the Pocket DMG, is dipping its toes into smartphones with the Pocket Play—a modern love letter to the old-school Xperia Play. No specs yet, but the teaser? Pure nostalgia with a twist. Slide the screen up, and bam—you’ve got ABXY buttons, a D-pad, Start/Select, and two magic touchpads that double as joysticks or trackpads. It’s like your 2010 gaming dreams got a sleek aluminum upgrade.

    That red button on the left? Suspiciously placed. Could be a secret shortcut, turbo function, or just AYANEO’s way of saying, “We know you’re gonna obsess over this.” (Spoiler: We are.)

    Cameras? Probably “good enough.” Battery life? TBD. Price? Hopefully not “buy-a-car” level. But here’s the real question: Do we actually need a gaming phone… or do we just miss sliding things open like it’s 2012?

    Drop your thoughts—and your pre-order cash—below. The Pocket Play isn’t out yet… but the hype already feels like a retro game with perfect save points. 🎮✨

  • Oblast Elevates Classic Blasto Gameplay on Commodore 64

    📰 New article from Retro Handhelds

    Oblast Elevates Classic Blasto Gameplay on Commodore 64

    https://retrohandhelds.gg/oblast-elevates-classic-blasto-gameplay-on-commodore-64/

    Imagine a 1978 arcade game that somehow got a caffeine IV drip and a synthwave makeover—welcome to Oblast, the Commodore 64’s most gloriously chaotic reboot since… well, ever.

    Cameron Kaiser didn’t just update Blasto—he turned it into a full-on sensory explosion. Where the original cramped everything into 2K of ROM, Oblast serves up 384 procedurally generated levels, customizable tank stats, and trails that look like a fireworks show in a paint factory. And yes—you can shoot during chain reactions now. No more waiting for the chaos to calm down. Just blast, burn, and repeat.

    But here’s the magic trick: all of this runs on a 40-year-old machine. The SID chip isn’t just playing sounds—it’s controlling screen shake. Voice 1? Gunfire. Voice 2? Tank engine revving as you move. Voice 3? Explosions that literally make the screen wobble. And at 240Hz, your tank moves smoother than a jazz sax solo.

    Even the memory hacks are genius—three sprites for one tank, color mode tricks that save 75% of RAM. It’s like building a Ferrari out of bicycle parts and then winning the Indy 500.

    Grab it on GitHub. Play it on your C64. Then buy the dev a Pibb. You owe him.

  • 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. 🕹️☕