China's Answer to the NES ft. Jackie Chan | 小霸王

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  • čas přidán 13. 07. 2023
  • The Xiao Bawang Education Computer was China's response to the popularity of the NES and Famicom game systems around the world. Duan Yongping, a young entrepreneur, led the delivery of the home computer to the public, bringing classic games and experiences to a whole generation. While often remembered for the iconic endorsement from Jackie Chan, it was the system's software that led the machine to be fondly remembered by generations of children.
    Correction:
    Bottom of the board revealing the main chip of the board: drive.google.com/file/d/1-MJ7...
    Reach out: inkbox@notin.tokyo
    notin.tokyo
    Featured Video Sources:
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    • 小霸王学习机广告 成龙 - Wangzi Chenglong Ad
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 822

  • @BluesBoySid
    @BluesBoySid Před 11 měsíci +379

    In Poland we also have received those "famiclones". They were made in Taiwan and was transported and selled under the name " Pegasus". Along with those yellow cartridges console is a sign of childhood most every kid from 90's. And now is the best: you can still buy them :)

    • @simonradowitzky4837
      @simonradowitzky4837 Před 11 měsíci +4

      I'd love to get a polish pegasus some day. And a dendy too. Are they still around or are they rare?

    • @leezhieng
      @leezhieng Před 11 měsíci +11

      I still saw these cartridges here in Malaysia. Each cartridge with 999 games (obviously fake lol) costs around USD $5. I don't remember how much is the console but I think should be somewhere around USD $20?

    • @ShadowriverUB
      @ShadowriverUB Před 11 měsíci +10

      Pegasus was most popular clone thats why everyone called all of them after it

    • @RADkate
      @RADkate Před 11 měsíci +3

      at this rate theyll still make famiclones in 100 years

    • @Chomakot
      @Chomakot Před 11 měsíci +8

      @@leezhieng i have around 10 cartridges with "999" games, all ten are different by one game. My grandpa may his soul rest would get me one cartridge everytime we went out, which most I lost somewhere

  • @greenmountaineer
    @greenmountaineer Před 11 měsíci +620

    I am absolutely flabbergasted that basically the whole computer is just those 2 little chips inside

    • @83hjf
      @83hjf Před 11 měsíci +113

      it's not. 100% sure there's an epoxy blob chip in the back.

    • @intel386DX
      @intel386DX Před 11 měsíci +13

      @@83hjf indeed

    • @oscarcacnio8418
      @oscarcacnio8418 Před 11 měsíci +9

      ​@@83hjfAnd you would be correct.

    • @belstar1128
      @belstar1128 Před 11 měsíci +31

      It was 12 year old tech when this came out.

    • @Nathan_H1gg3rz
      @Nathan_H1gg3rz Před 11 měsíci +14

      *LETS GO BRANDON*

  • @thegamesninja3119
    @thegamesninja3119 Před 11 měsíci +138

    Whenever I want to play an NES cart, I have Jackie Chan run it for me. Jackie Chan can run NES carts, while Chuck Norris cannot.

    • @anthonyt219
      @anthonyt219 Před 11 měsíci

      Lmao

    • @thegamesninja3119
      @thegamesninja3119 Před 11 měsíci +7

      @ihateallpeople laugh while you can... as per John Whorfin from Buckaroo Banzai, but have you ever tried to run an NES game on Chuck Norris? NES games do not run on Chuck Norris, they run FROM Chuck Norris. 🥷

    • @chiefhydropolis
      @chiefhydropolis Před 11 měsíci

      ​@@thegamesninja3119chuck norris: god of everything

    • @thegamesninja3119
      @thegamesninja3119 Před 11 měsíci +2

      @@chiefhydropolis but he doesn't run NES carts. 🥷

    • @Renvaar1989
      @Renvaar1989 Před 10 měsíci

      Chuck Norris was already running PS5 games back when Jackie Chan was running NES carts.

  • @LuxyX
    @LuxyX Před 11 měsíci +214

    Here in Brazil we had the Magic Computer from Dynacom, it was something like this, a computer keyboard with a NES cartridge that you could even write codes in Basic, it was rly cool, I have mine till this day

    • @Nathan_H1gg3rz
      @Nathan_H1gg3rz Před 11 měsíci +5

      Here in America we have everything 🇺🇲

    • @jnharton
      @jnharton Před 11 měsíci +23

      The NES is fundamentally similar to a 6502-based home computer of maybe 5-10 years prior, albeit it's designed to be a game console. Aside from the overall design, the major difference is having a custom graphics controller and slightly fancier audio capability. -- It was probably pretty easy to turn into a passable computer as long as you wrote your software with the PPU's capabilities and behavior in mind. -- I would guess that it's designers were familiar with the Apple II line of computers which was very successful and saw many, many clones.

    • @squeter
      @squeter Před 11 měsíci +2

      magic computer era uma tranqueira mto top

    • @FelipePlayzYT
      @FelipePlayzYT Před 11 měsíci +3

      cade o polystation gente?

    • @squeter
      @squeter Před 11 měsíci

      @@FelipePlayzYT kkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkk um classico de merda kkkkkkkkkkkk

  • @InkboxSoftware
    @InkboxSoftware  Před 11 měsíci +66

    For all those saying it isn't just two chips, you're right. Here's a photo of the bottom of the board: drive.google.com/file/d/1-MJ7DocH6dQi3JY19jnO5GTbdcSqp9_M/view?usp=sharing

    • @ricardobino7410
      @ricardobino7410 Před 11 měsíci +5

      You should edit or re upload the video with the updated information.

    • @thelabby9998
      @thelabby9998 Před 11 měsíci

      The rear chip (under the black glue) probably the CPU...

    • @GetterRay
      @GetterRay Před 11 měsíci

      @@ricardobino7410 No, that would require integrity.

    • @retroarcadefan
      @retroarcadefan Před 11 měsíci +1

      Gotta love when people who don't know anything talk out of their azz as if they do. Very interesting video!

    • @keiyakins
      @keiyakins Před 11 měsíci +10

      ​@@ricardobino7410 You can't. CZcams refuses to let people do any sort of editing, and penalizes you if you upload largely the same video twice.

  • @shinyagumon7015
    @shinyagumon7015 Před 11 měsíci +87

    Ah so the weird audio glitch wasn't on my end, cool that you fixed it.
    Also this ironically much more of a Family Computer than the actual Famicom ever was.

    • @InkboxSoftware
      @InkboxSoftware  Před 11 měsíci +22

      Stereo audio glitch when my left headphone is broken, it slipped through the cracks. Glad I caught it early enough though.

    • @RicardoOliveira-ug3ep
      @RicardoOliveira-ug3ep Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@InkboxSoftware so that's what happened.

    • @shinyagumon7015
      @shinyagumon7015 Před 11 měsíci +6

      @@InkboxSoftware Funny because I through it was me because my right side earbud is broken.😂

    • @RicardoOliveira-ug3ep
      @RicardoOliveira-ug3ep Před 11 měsíci

      @@InkboxSoftware well i dont think i had noticed it

    • @oscarcacnio8418
      @oscarcacnio8418 Před 11 měsíci +7

      There might have been potential with the Famicom DD attachment. I don't know.

  • @Breakbeats92.5
    @Breakbeats92.5 Před 11 měsíci +122

    Me and my buddies were going bananas for the NES here in Southern California in the mid to late 80's. We never spent a second thinking about what games and consoles kids in other countries were playing. Thanks for the vid.

    • @bazinganigga618
      @bazinganigga618 Před 11 měsíci +3

      Only now why found out about these abominations

    • @hahamanin
      @hahamanin Před 11 měsíci

      ​@@bazinganigga618I saw these abominations in the market but as a kid I still knew only because I used to read a lot of comic books which were us printed ones..

    • @erickflores2224
      @erickflores2224 Před 11 měsíci +5

      thats very american.

    • @Halfbreed75thSt
      @Halfbreed75thSt Před 10 měsíci

      ​@@erickflores2224 Awww you gonna cry now

    • @Renvaar1989
      @Renvaar1989 Před 10 měsíci

      Went bananas... I see what you did there!

  • @walterkarloff2061
    @walterkarloff2061 Před 10 měsíci +23

    I remember I actually had this computer as a child here in Russia. Everything was almost the same except it was rebranded and localized. The Silver SUBOR word was still there, but all the Chinese symbols were replaced by Russian, and the Educational cartridge was different. All the speed typing things and basic were still there, but music thing was replaced by a collection of old Russian folk songs with Karaoke, there was no calculator, no Chinese code specific programs, but there was a graphical editor where you could chose a bunch of objects and shapes and build pictures out of them.

    • @user-ez8le1rp3x
      @user-ez8le1rp3x Před 7 měsíci

      It was crap and you know it. I'm from Russia too, Dendy just outcompeted it easily

  • @JamesWon6
    @JamesWon6 Před 11 měsíci +53

    I still have mine, my father bought one in China in 1991. Mine still works, great video didn't know the history

    • @MrAllmightyCornholioz
      @MrAllmightyCornholioz Před 11 měsíci +3

      Buddha bless your father!

    • @nehcooahnait7827
      @nehcooahnait7827 Před 11 měsíci +2

      My dad bought me one in 2001, but my mum kinda threw it away around 2013. I kinda let her 😢

  • @Raubritterr222
    @Raubritterr222 Před 11 měsíci +72

    Great video! After USSR collapse, kids in Ukraine, Russia, Belarus and other former soviet countries also played games on chinese famiclones (because they were affordable) I got a Hitex-767 or something like this around 1995, and my classmate had Subor SB-225 and it looked super stylish, all black. Also Dendy was a popular brand in those countries, originated from Russian company that was selling Micro Genius consoles, but under their own name. My other friend had BT Warrior. In 1999 or 2000 I saw Subor Education Computer with Russian cartridge. It had two versions of basic, F-BASIC and G-BASIC. I don't know what was the difference, because we didn't have manual.
    PS youtube channel named 'Kinamania' has some great documentary-style videos on these topic regarding ex-soviet countries.

    • @CK_Tex
      @CK_Tex Před 11 měsíci +5

      During my visit to Moscow years ago (World Cup year), I actually could find many Dendy machines still available for purchase in the market, while due to language barrier, I cannot communicate in Russian fluently, I did not get one finally.

    • @chiefhydropolis
      @chiefhydropolis Před 11 měsíci +3

      in kazakhstan dendy was also popular, my mom remembers playing mario 1 on a dendy decades ago

    • @SicketMog
      @SicketMog Před 10 měsíci +3

      I also had a Subor, because my father was (and remains) super cheap, that was funnily enough imported by a cop (!) before he didn't dare to do it anymore due to Bergsala/Nintendo. It looked JUST like a Famicom. So I actually find that kind of funny; I've got a massively different gaming experience as a child compared to all of my friends (who had proper NES). Turned out for the better for me too I'd say thanks to the multicarts, hundreds of games available (whereas Nintendo had a price monopoly that the EU fined them for in the early 00's iirc) and the fact that it's a toploader means it still works to this day afaik (not plugged in for a couple of years) without pin-issues or the carts having been blown into. The controllers also had turbo-buttons making some of the games nicer to play. Also the orange zapper was replaced by something that looked even more like a real gun than the grey zapper ever did. 😎💥
      I may be Scandinavian but my early formative gaming experience is pure USSR. 😛

    • @collared
      @collared Před 10 měsíci

      in 2000s as a small child i had this exact chinese keyboard famiclone from the video

    • @MeiinUK
      @MeiinUK Před 10 měsíci

      @@SicketMog: It's so weird that this was what was going on at that time too... I also remembers the NES... I didn't get one here in the UK. But we did have the BBC micro that had the basics and the basic computer. We then had things like the Amstrad. And various spectrums... and in HK.. the NES was selling quite quickly. Haven't heard of the Subor at all....
      So how come the company didn't actually... sell abroad, rather than to sell inside China ? That was weird.

  • @osamaroum
    @osamaroum Před 11 měsíci +6

    In the Arab world we had the same keyboard in the 90s called "the king of the golden tigers" in Arabic "Malik el numur el dhahabia" , but with Arabic language .
    Also you can play Famicom games .

    • @felisuco_com
      @felisuco_com Před 5 měsíci

      they did the same for spanish market called "king of leopard" "rey del leopardo"

  • @AttilaSVK
    @AttilaSVK Před 11 měsíci +20

    I remember these from the Chinese markets we had in my hometown in Slovakia in the late '90s. I really wanted one, but I only got an Atari 2600 clone called "RAMBO TV GAME" :)

  • @collectthemall
    @collectthemall Před 11 měsíci +49

    I had a Subor as a kid . You could get them outside of China for 15-20$ . They were really good unlike similar Famiclones .I know people that still own them and still playing them. All Subors are based on NOAC technology which was developed in Taiwan .

    • @collared
      @collared Před 10 měsíci +1

      i had one back in 2000s

  • @Moonhack95
    @Moonhack95 Před 11 měsíci +53

    There's a version of this machine with a fully working DOS and Floppy disk interface, with programming languages included, so it's a full 80s home computer based on the NES architecture, since you can actually save your work off the cartridge memory, I think it's one of the most ambitious famiclone derivates ever because of that

    • @cyberyogicowindler2448
      @cyberyogicowindler2448 Před 11 měsíci +6

      I remember 1990th ads on "Asian Sources" for a version with small B/W CRT, diskette drive and something like 4MB RAM sold as a school computer.

  • @EdgyVidyaGeneral
    @EdgyVidyaGeneral Před 11 měsíci +26

    Dude you have a great way of making things I've never heard about so interesting

    • @Nathan_H1gg3rz
      @Nathan_H1gg3rz Před 11 měsíci +1

      Hopefully he does a video about girls for you next

  • @quite1enough
    @quite1enough Před 11 měsíci +11

    I'm from Russia and I had this thing when I was a kid ^^

    • @Nathan_H1gg3rz
      @Nathan_H1gg3rz Před 11 měsíci

      Rip

    • @quite1enough
      @quite1enough Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@Nathan_H1gg3rz it was actually pretty good, only my cat used to chew controller cords all the time and it was hard to find replacements back then 😭

    • @Nathan_H1gg3rz
      @Nathan_H1gg3rz Před 11 měsíci

      @@quite1enough RIP Russia

    • @quite1enough
      @quite1enough Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@Nathan_H1gg3rz I'm not so sure what you mean lol

  • @hyrulesavior2008
    @hyrulesavior2008 Před 11 měsíci +3

    This device was very popular in North Africa back in the late 90's. We had it in Arabic and English. I still have mine kept in my house. it used to be called ( Gold King Leopard / ملك النمور الذهبي )

    • @cyberyogicowindler2448
      @cyberyogicowindler2448 Před 11 měsíci +1

      I also have a black one "Gold Leopard King" and a few others. Another famous brand was "Asder".

    • @hyrulesavior2008
      @hyrulesavior2008 Před 11 měsíci

      @@cyberyogicowindler2448 from which country ? i'm from Morocco

    • @cyberyogicowindler2448
      @cyberyogicowindler2448 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@hyrulesavior2008 from Germany. We mainly found famiclones sold in Turkish shops or by (new or used goods) fleamarket vendors.

    • @hyrulesavior2008
      @hyrulesavior2008 Před 11 měsíci

      @@cyberyogicowindler2448 i thought you guys liked to keep up to date with sony/nintendo/sega. I chose the gold king leopard because it was cheaper and the games were affordable

  • @andersdenkend
    @andersdenkend Před 11 měsíci +4

    Well done, very in depth and interesting. Great chinese pronunciation as well!

  • @st1ka
    @st1ka Před 11 měsíci +6

    Super interesting video. I've been wanting to learn more about this computer/nes thingy for ages, but reliable info was hard to come by

    • @JarbasOVOS
      @JarbasOVOS Před 11 měsíci +1

      In Portugal we got the Gold Leopard King, basically the same thing! But all examples I've come across were imported from Spain

  • @happyd6145
    @happyd6145 Před 10 měsíci +10

    These videogame consoles were extremely popular in India as well. All of them used chip based catridges and resembled a keyboard. It had games like Super Mario, Duckhunt, Popeye, Contra. These consoles were cheap but not durable. I too wondered how the entire system is made up of only two chips. Chinese are genius ! Love from India ❤

  • @pabblo1
    @pabblo1 Před 11 měsíci +39

    Famiclones were also really common in post-Soviet and post-communist countries.
    Let me give two examples:
    Russia - they had the Dendy console, which was immensely popular.
    Poland - they had the Pegasus console, which was also immensely popular. So popular in fact, that many Poles call the NES "Pegasus".

    • @MrPantera1987
      @MrPantera1987 Před 11 měsíci +7

      In Yugoslavia there was "Terminator". I think it was made in Taiwan.

    • @pabblo1
      @pabblo1 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@MrPantera1987 Ah yes, the Terminator 2 console. It was sold in a lot of post-Soviet/post-communist countries, including Poland, where it was sold alongside the Pegasus, which I already talked about.

    • @MrPantera1987
      @MrPantera1987 Před 11 měsíci +2

      @@pabblo1 Yeah. I am thankful to all those consoles that save our sanity in those turbulent times.

    • @Nathan_H1gg3rz
      @Nathan_H1gg3rz Před 11 měsíci +1

      Human wave attacks were pretty popular too I've heard

    • @pabblo1
      @pabblo1 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@Nathan_H1gg3rz Hmmm...?
      I'm not sure what you're talking about.

  • @michaelthomashamilton
    @michaelthomashamilton Před 11 měsíci +13

    I lived in Beijing from 2014 to 2016 and I saw the Xiaobawang famicom clone being sold at local supermarket I was shopping at one day. It was being sold for 100 RMB or about $16 USD. I was intrigued by it and picked one up. It came with a cart that had like 100 ROMs or something like that. Mario, Tetris, etc. Was definitely interesting. Never heard of Xiaobawang before seeing that machine for sale at the supermarket.

  • @nickelarcade6934
    @nickelarcade6934 Před 11 měsíci +3

    I’m convinced Jackie Chan walked off the set of Rumble in the Bronx and did the ads for the pc. He’s literally wearing the exact same 2 outfits lol

  • @Esteban_LeGrafx
    @Esteban_LeGrafx Před 11 měsíci +3

    I really enjoy the videos you make (e.g. the OS for Famicom/NES was the first one I watched) and I appreciate all the little details you include (not just the commentary, but the visual close-ups of hardware and hinges working, etc. Ignore the critics and keep making/creating stuff. Lots of fun.

  • @stephenmorrissey1254
    @stephenmorrissey1254 Před 11 měsíci +5

    Excellent essay. Great video too!

  • @MildMisanthropeMaybeMassive
    @MildMisanthropeMaybeMassive Před 11 měsíci +61

    Something to note. 小霸王 or _Little Emperor_ is a slang term in Chinese Culture to refer to spoiled children. Especially only childs/sole sons born during the One Child Policy.

    • @musAKulture
      @musAKulture Před 11 měsíci +29

      not necessarily. 小皇帝 was used far more commonly. 小霸王 instead is for school bullies. 皇帝 is emperor 霸王 is "hegemon" or “dominator". you mixed the two terms up.

    • @Nathan_H1gg3rz
      @Nathan_H1gg3rz Před 11 měsíci

      In the United States, Chinese owned businesses are known as centers of human trafficking of sex and labor

    • @Deetroiter
      @Deetroiter Před 10 měsíci +1

      Now, they're just called Fuerdai and Tuhao

    • @awesomegmg956
      @awesomegmg956 Před 10 měsíci +1

      It just refer to 孙策 Sun Ce

  • @Clancydaenlightened
    @Clancydaenlightened Před 11 měsíci +6

    I believe ukraine built Famicoms too, called dendy, and unlike China used off the shelf parts with authentic memory map and custom vsli for graphics and sound

    • @patosomon724
      @patosomon724 Před 11 měsíci +3

      Interesting, I know that there was actually a Dendy factory in Dubna called "Tensor" (Near Moscow) in Russia but in Ukraine I don't know

  • @Dragonfire511
    @Dragonfire511 Před 11 měsíci +3

    Your channel was recommended to me, suscribed.

  • @oliviagoblin8604
    @oliviagoblin8604 Před 6 měsíci

    What an incredible video thank you so much for making it! I rarely get to here about technology that isn’t from the US or Japan and it’s so exciting.

  • @chilling-boy
    @chilling-boy Před 11 měsíci +3

    我仍然记得这个设备,很好的视频,继续保持

  • @NiffirgkcaJ
    @NiffirgkcaJ Před 11 měsíci +5

    I still remember that my friend used to have a "console" that was basically the entire keyboard. It still blows my mind to this day.

  • @kaukomieli
    @kaukomieli Před 11 měsíci +5

    The idea behind the game "Letters Invade" to me is brilliant. It's just so simple yet so much fun, it utilizes a keyboard perfectly, and even trains the player to type faster! This reminded me of a java mobile game made by the makers of Habbo Hotel that I played in like 2008. The game was called Habbo Dreams and it had the exact same idea, except you had to protect a guy sleeping in his bed from some nightmare monsters walking towards the bed, which were eliminated by typing a word that they had written on them. That game also had some special enemies and/or powerups if I remember correctly, for example a word that when typed would eliminate all enemies on the screen at once.

  • @nagruvajse
    @nagruvajse Před 11 měsíci

    This was very nice to watch. tnx man

  • @axelprino
    @axelprino Před 11 měsíci +12

    Here in Argentina Famiclones were very popular in the 90's, although we just called them "Family", pretty sure they came from Taiwan through Paraguay. I had a few of them growing up since they were pretty cheap, I remember they costed between 20 and 30 USD back then, and one of them was in that keyboard format and also came with a cartridge with "software" in it. I wonder if that thing is still stashed away among my old stuff, I know one of the normal Famiclones is there and looks to be in good condition, someday I'll have to check if that old keyboard computer still works.

    • @simonradowitzky4837
      @simonradowitzky4837 Před 11 měsíci

      Vine a comentar exactamente lo mismo! Jajaja. Seguro que todavia funciona. Eran un fierro. Sino avisame que yo las reparo. Generalmente son cosas sencillas.

    • @kubratodason719
      @kubratodason719 Před 11 měsíci +2

      Muchachoos

    • @leandromuller2127
      @leandromuller2127 Před 11 měsíci

      No todos eran importados ojo. Los dynacom por ejemplo eran argentinos-brasileños

  •  Před 11 měsíci +8

    I had a clone of this console in 2001, it had Microsoft Word clone and it was saving what i wrote into it, even if I close the console. If i disconnect the ac adapter, it was gone but it was a miracle for me back in the day.

  • @KuchingKingVideoGamer
    @KuchingKingVideoGamer Před 11 měsíci +2

    BBK became a popular company making Oppo,Vivo and Realme smartphones which are affordable and very popular in Asian region 😊
    I wish Yongping and his company BBK create a powerful handheld gaming device 😊

    • @OCTAGRAM
      @OCTAGRAM Před 11 měsíci

      The best I know is RetroGenesis Port 3000, with savegame feature and SD card. And it supports several gaming systems, SEGA and SNES most notably

  • @dnielv
    @dnielv Před 11 měsíci +32

    I'm not so sure about those two chips. There is simply not enough pins to drive the screen, memory, cartdridge port, audio and controllers in those chips.
    I'm quite sure there must be an epoxy "Nes on a chip" blob on the opposite side of that PCB or in other place.

  • @donaldklopper
    @donaldklopper Před 11 měsíci +1

    Lovely detailed review. Good job!

  • @supersmallchibiwolf872
    @supersmallchibiwolf872 Před 11 měsíci +4

    This was wonderful. I love Jackie Chan and his old movies. I never used this computer, but I find it cool that It plays Famicom catridges. Cool video. ^_^

  • @QLTD
    @QLTD Před 11 měsíci +5

    Great video thanks! 2:00 I never knew these were boxing gloves! always thought it was a face or something. The company made different versions for different languages, I have a video on my channel trying to repair and Arabic version of this famiclone educational computer.

  • @Guilhermeabcd
    @Guilhermeabcd Před 11 měsíci

    very interesting and well put video. Thanks!

  • @NewRepublicMapper
    @NewRepublicMapper Před 11 měsíci +5

    Fun fact: The new company founded by Duan Yongping, the BBK is one of company became popular in Southeast Asian and Indian Countries, they are makers of "Bang the Buck" phones

  • @evilLincoln
    @evilLincoln Před 11 měsíci +3

    Ещё не смотрел, но это же наш родной Сюбор! :)

  • @d00mch1ld
    @d00mch1ld Před 11 měsíci +3

    My family are from Zhong Shan, heart of Canton. It very close to Macau and Hong Kong, which explains how technology flowed through these cities into China.

    • @Nathan_H1gg3rz
      @Nathan_H1gg3rz Před 11 měsíci

      Tell us you got a tiny manhood without telling us you got a tiny manhood

  • @Marius150PL
    @Marius150PL Před 11 měsíci +5

    Interesting video. In other parts of world (Poland included, e.g. GLK-2004) there were clones of this, but usually without parallel port and of course different cartridge.

  • @InariOkami
    @InariOkami Před 11 měsíci +7

    Wow! Latin-American Millennials at last we know the name of the anonymous hero that changed our childhood: Duan Yongping.
    At that time, around 1990, Nintendo (NES) was brand new as a game console into our region and the most expensive one, the Atari 2600 was popular both for being the game console of our parents, the Gen-X people, and for having cheap (clone) games selling everywhere, even at flea markets. Having a NES was an actual luxury, but then the Famiclones came and flooded the market with the popular famicom cartridges having many games into one. And was indeed the Red and White D25! I remember having one being exactly the same design with the chinese instructions for the power and reset buttons at 01:25 and all. Years later the famiclones were evolving to mimic other consoles like the NES, PS1 (the well known PolylStations) and such.
    Thanks for this video. Now I understand why Jackie Chan said something about videogames being bad at one of the episodes of his "Jackie Chan Adventures" cartoon, he was in line with the chinese (government) idea of videogames turning kids into unproductive people.

  • @ragewolf3728
    @ragewolf3728 Před 11 měsíci

    Thanks for the video. I always wanted some in-depth info about these keyboards. I had 2 of those(Lara 17, GLK Book). These brings back nostalgia

  • @volkanzumrut1635
    @volkanzumrut1635 Před 10 měsíci

    非常好!非常感謝您準備這齣視頻。就是那個遊戲叫「圍棋WEIQI」,不是GO。

  • @moechano
    @moechano Před 11 měsíci +6

    cute 8bit rendition of Bella Ciao at around 8 mins :)

    • @InkboxSoftware
      @InkboxSoftware  Před 11 měsíci +6

      Fun fact, all music in this video was recorded from the Music Appreciation app on the Education Cartridge.

    • @moechano
      @moechano Před 11 měsíci

      @@InkboxSoftware Honestly that's pretty cool you included a lil detail like that for the video editing :)

  • @yanghao8351
    @yanghao8351 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Great Video! And you pronounced the Chinese correctly! Even used the tones!

  • @mrgtmodernretrogamingtech6891
    @mrgtmodernretrogamingtech6891 Před 11 měsíci +10

    Even that Bootleg of NES/FamiCom has a LOT of Bootleg scattered around malls and groceries (Gaming Stall Inside) here in Philippines in the Early 2000s. My mom got me one when this thing hit the store since it was very cheap in 2001 compare to it's Original NES/FamiCom release in the mid 80s to early 90s... It was my very first console and one of the happiest moment of my life... =)

  • @TheRealAburaman
    @TheRealAburaman Před 10 měsíci

    This is such an awesome video!

  • @chanmaran5107
    @chanmaran5107 Před 11 měsíci +2

    Oh wow. And BBK ended up becoming the biggest smartphone manufacturer in the world with OPPO, Vivo, and Oneplus as its brands. Fascinating connection of Duan Yongping to video games.

    • @adrammelech6323
      @adrammelech6323 Před 10 měsíci

      Realme too. Also remember them in the 00s as manufacturers of pretty good cheap DVD players that could read even badly scratched disks

    • @MeiinUK
      @MeiinUK Před 10 měsíci

      BBK makes Oppo,, Vivo.. and Oneplus ? Oh wow...

  • @DominicJacksonFilm
    @DominicJacksonFilm Před 11 měsíci

    really interesting and well constructed documentary thank you

  • @EeveeFromAlmia
    @EeveeFromAlmia Před 11 měsíci +6

    I love how you're able to say the Chinese words in this so well; it makes it less of a 'lol look at their weird famiclone' but a 'oh, look at this weird famiclone', yaknow? It sounds like you care about the topic you're talking about.

    • @anthonyt219
      @anthonyt219 Před 11 měsíci +3

      Lol I think it's because he's actually chinese .
      But I would be very surprised if he's white or something.
      The way he pronounces it made it seem like he was a native speaker

  • @taher_abdelhameed
    @taher_abdelhameed Před 10 měsíci +1

    I'm a 27 year old Egyptian and this keyboard NES was my - and most of my generation's - first gaming device ever. It used to have an Arabic-English keyboard layout and an English OS interface

  • @ddabrahim
    @ddabrahim Před 11 měsíci +2

    Wish I had something like this when I was a kid. Could have introduced me to programming at a young age.

  • @Tolbat
    @Tolbat Před 10 měsíci

    Thanks, I enjoyed this video.

  • @felisuco_com
    @felisuco_com Před 5 měsíci +3

    WOW, as a chinese videogames rare stuff collector this video show me an amazing thing, this is the reason why exists the KING OF LEOPARD consoles that also created the "rey de leopardo" for the spanish market, always i wondered why... why a nes with keyboard and kind of educational rare obscure games arrived to europe.

  • @atcera8714
    @atcera8714 Před 11 měsíci +3

    My friend had this. It could play most cartridges and also came with cartridges that were about typing and learning. It was boring at the time but looking back now, shit was amazing

  • @hackdesigner
    @hackdesigner Před 11 měsíci +6

    Wow I had no idea! I had a famiclone that looks exactly like the one you showed but it was branded Liko and the series was... drumroll... "BBK-1"! Internally it also looked exactly the same. Did not survive my experiments with attempts to power it through LPT port when mom took away the power brick once :D
    Anyway, as someone already wrote down, it had 2 versions of BASIC:
    - F-BASIC like you showed (though MUCH faster) - that allowed full 32 bit operations and IEEE-style floating point manipulation (yeah you figure, with those 2 chips! Incredible!) I knew it worked because I used it to generate the answer to the "chess problem" - 2^64-1.
    - G-BASIC. Oh man. This is where the 150-A4-page-long 8pt text supplied manual was used. This was "Game BASIC" - you could manipulate sprites, design backgrounds, control sprites with keyboard OR JOYSTICK, write music, manipulate memory etc. etc. But it was 16 bit int only. This was what brought me to IT back then, this is how I learned coding. Without exaggeration, the BBK-1 fired the spark for my future career and allowed me to become who I am today.
    P.S.: if you want to learn about it, search for the ROM titled "Обучающий картридж" (teaching cartridge). Could be there were English -focused ones.

  • @walterpark8824
    @walterpark8824 Před 5 měsíci

    Ah, this begins to fill a huge hole in my understanding of modern computer history. Interesting how one bright guy can make a successful company! And you pique my curiosity again about how a language with thousands of characters can be input with a 101-key keyboard. Thanks!!

  • @abhijitleihaorambam3763
    @abhijitleihaorambam3763 Před 11 měsíci +3

    This was popular too in india, i remember playing from this instead of the original nes(we didn't know the original nes)

  • @AryonGothic
    @AryonGothic Před 11 měsíci +3

    No Brasil, tivemos o "Magic Computer PC-95" , fabricado pela Dynacon, foi o videogame da minha Infância, esses dias consegui comprar um para reviver essa época.

  • @nathangraves1069
    @nathangraves1069 Před 11 měsíci

    Can you imagine having this console signed by Jackie Chan? .....awesome video!!

  • @SourabhMittal-en1fe
    @SourabhMittal-en1fe Před 11 měsíci +1

    I had this. Never knew there was so much history behind it.

  • @ogglogg
    @ogglogg Před 11 měsíci +14

    Man imagine bringing video games to families that could have otherwise never afforded to give their kids the joy, and on top of being cheap you’re also known for quality and service…
    That’s what business should be about. (Not the piracy part though haha)

  • @old_liquid
    @old_liquid Před 11 měsíci

    I remember Subors was imported in my country in 90s, nice video

  • @KiraSlith
    @KiraSlith Před 11 měsíci +9

    Still having a terrible time getting one of these, such a cool famiclone. I know as soon as SHTF they're basically going to become permanent unobtanium.

    • @LostieTrekieTechie
      @LostieTrekieTechie Před 11 měsíci

      Has anyone made blueprints/replicas or emulated the additional hardware functions?

    • @jimbotron70
      @jimbotron70 Před 11 měsíci

      @@LostieTrekieTechie It's a Famiclone without exotic hardware in it, if you transplant its ROM into a PC emulator it basically works.

    • @KiraSlith
      @KiraSlith Před 11 měsíci

      @@LostieTrekieTechie I vaguely remember Higan was going to add that eventually but they shut down over scene drama, and last I checked they hadn't done it yet. There was one between 2006-2012, not sure if anything came of it, if it ever got a name, or even if it was JUST for FamilyBASIC.

    • @cyberyogicowindler2448
      @cyberyogicowindler2448 Před 11 měsíci

      @@LostieTrekieTechie The MAME team did much work to emulate specific flaws and features of individual famiclones. I think this also included ASDER and a few other with keyboard.

  • @KathyXie
    @KathyXie Před 11 měsíci +2

    You can still buy modern 小霸王 familclones with hdmi output or those 120 in 1 or 450 in 1 cartridges but it seems that Xiaobawang filed for bankruptcy in 2020 and Yihua Group the parent company allows third party manufacturers to use 小霸王 trademark

    • @OCTAGRAM
      @OCTAGRAM Před 11 měsíci

      With keyboard? Where?

  • @user-sr7fd4ni4t
    @user-sr7fd4ni4t Před 11 měsíci

    holy shit no way, lol this is so nostalgic, good job bro

  • @bocbinsgames6745
    @bocbinsgames6745 Před 11 měsíci +7

    holy shit its a 五笔 keyboard (not watched the whole video as of commenting I'm just excited.about it)
    I type with wubi and literally no one else I know of (except my aunt) can use this now rather obscure ime

    • @OCTAGRAM
      @OCTAGRAM Před 11 měsíci

      When I was learning Chinese, I was writing Wubi version for every glyph and tried to memorize them too. Sometimes it helped me to recreate the visual, because the visual as is not easily memorizable for Russians

  • @chimyshark
    @chimyshark Před 11 měsíci +2

    Oh mannn so that's what is was! My cousin in China has one in 2000. I had a GBC and we'd swap. I had no idea what it was, didn't look anything like any American console. I've never even heard of NES at the time, so I couldn't figure out what it was, but it was totally fun. The game cartridges were always 4 in 1. I played Chip 'N Dale rescue rangers, Double Dragon 2 and 3, Contra 1... Later I learned these games were NES games, and I thought the Xiao Bawang was a knockoff NES. Now I see it was a Chinese Famicom.

  • @10MinuteGamer
    @10MinuteGamer Před 11 měsíci

    Dude, I want one of these now! I had no idea of this history since I migrated from Hong Kong to US back in 1989. I would have loved the red and white machine since it was cheaper. Duan would have been my hero if my family was able to afford one of those.

  • @Kaziklu
    @Kaziklu Před 10 měsíci

    That was actually really interesting. It basically took the Commodore 64 concept from the 1980s and Famacom'd it up for China... Thanks for doing this series.

  • @LavaCreeperPeople
    @LavaCreeperPeople Před 11 měsíci +6

    So this is the chinese Nintendo Entertainment System...

    • @JaxTheEpic
      @JaxTheEpic Před 4 měsíci +1

      The Russian One is the Dendy
      The Polish one is the Pegasus
      The Taiwanese one is the Micro Genius and so many others due to the country having a huge market for famiclones and bootleg games.

  • @NyxTheShieldOFFICIAL
    @NyxTheShieldOFFICIAL Před 11 měsíci

    So this is the thing I had when I was a kid! I remember having a cartridge with a bunch of games for learning english haha

  • @WillH1776
    @WillH1776 Před 11 měsíci +2

    I played on both and also owned the keyboard, but when I brought it back home here in the US it didn't work right because it was in PAL configuration and not NTSC so I played it in black and white and at the time I didn't know if a converter existed.

  • @uncrunch398
    @uncrunch398 Před 11 měsíci +3

    My guess is the majority of functionality is in the program ROMs; chips on the main board are just to boot then transition to the inserted ROM letting it take over.

  • @jtm732
    @jtm732 Před 11 měsíci +1

    My wife grew up in Northern China and had a knock off of the Subor version. She got it around 1995, and it was similar with the keyboard, but it wasn’t as popular. I may be able to get a picture, we have only found one picture of it ever.

    • @Game_Hero
      @Game_Hero Před 11 měsíci

      so knockoffs got knockoffs, interesting

  • @PixelReality1
    @PixelReality1 Před 11 měsíci +2

    Вот это я понимаю информация!
    Супер!
    Groovy

  • @Kytk7
    @Kytk7 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Ese modelo tuve, fué mi primera consola 😢.
    Que recuerdos ❤, recuerdo un juego donde escribías y caminaban los personajes de Mario Bros 😂❤

  • @ralseidreemurr2682
    @ralseidreemurr2682 Před 11 měsíci

    This exact console was all over east europe in the 90s which was called Dendy with a logo of a little elephant, as much i remember this console was pretty much region free so it could play any cartridges but with difference in audio.

  • @Pesthauch666
    @Pesthauch666 Před 11 měsíci +3

    1:58: At first glance that logo to me looked more like a faceless old-fashioned dame with a prominent 50' haircut. Also I grew up with some obscure computers too, like the east german KC85 computers (using a Z80 processor clone) or the the Polyplay arcade machine (btw. the only east german arcade).

    • @jimbotron70
      @jimbotron70 Před 11 měsíci

      Polyplay = VEB Robotron Dresden

  • @Gameboygenius
    @Gameboygenius Před 11 měsíci +3

    Pretty sure there are more chip on the underside of the board, maybe a black blob or two. Those two chips alone literally don't have enough pins to support all the IO needed for the cartridge bus.

  • @Nitzzer
    @Nitzzer Před 11 měsíci

    I had 3 of these. As gaming consoles from nintendo or any other company were not available in my state and were very expensive if imported, we didn’t even know that it was a clone, I still own about 80 cartridges from my childhood with a huge collection of nes games. They were available for about 50 to 60 cents with each cartridge containing about 4 different games. I owned the 15 pin ones and the 9 pin ones too. They used to break pretty easily. Even the controller’s weren’t very long lasting, But they were worth the experience.

  • @elmajdouliabdelhakim6900
    @elmajdouliabdelhakim6900 Před 10 měsíci

    As a 90's kid growing up in Morocco, I have had 4 or 5 of these consoles from 2001 to 2005 (yep, the power adapter used to heat up so much that it breaks after an extended play session and I really played long hours to finish super mario bros 1 ). We had it named in Arabic and the translation for it was : The golden king of tigers ... Beautiful times, the console itself costed around the equivalent of 16$ (a keyboard, 2 joysticks and a zapper) and the cartridges were like 2$ and each cartridge contained at least 10000 games ( actually it's 20 to 30 NES roms on repeat) , my favs were Contra, ghost'n' goblings, adventure island and mappy

  • @wes773105333
    @wes773105333 Před 11 měsíci +1

    I had a newer version of this that was sold at a local flea market in the US around 2000. It had the educational cartridge but i dont remember messing with it as much. It also had games included in it on a game cartridge. I don't remember what the controllers looked like but I remember playing super mario bros on it a lot.

    • @b3h8t1n
      @b3h8t1n Před 11 měsíci

      Gold leopard king probably 😅

    • @wes773105333
      @wes773105333 Před 11 měsíci

      @@b3h8t1n You're right. After searching for it on Google, I'm 100% sure I had the GLK 1119. I remember there being a yellow game cartridge that isn't in the images on Google. Maybe it's possible some came with a Famicom multicart included?

  • @haryadisuryonoto1118
    @haryadisuryonoto1118 Před 11 měsíci

    amazing after a few decades, i can still read that BASIC codes : the traditional BASICA syntax programming with number lines 😅

  • @robertdrisdelle
    @robertdrisdelle Před 10 měsíci

    Was not expecting that screen of I Love My Family

  • @LastBastion
    @LastBastion Před 10 měsíci

    i remember having one back then, great memory

  • @Precel42
    @Precel42 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Some high pitched squeeks whenever camera mic is recording the device itself

  • @Hnigma
    @Hnigma Před 11 měsíci

    Oh god that's the one that I had when I was young
    Good ol' days ❤❤❤

  • @tiagobasilio3124
    @tiagobasilio3124 Před 11 měsíci

    My first console was the famiclone with this logo on it.
    Always intrigued me, because is a such a high quality clone with a" goldstar" chips on motherboard. (television manufacturer).

  • @mangotar0
    @mangotar0 Před 11 měsíci

    I also had one of these Famicom clones (Localised in English ofcourse) back in the early 2000s in the Philippines. Majority had these clones because it was more affordable for the economic state back then. Thats just how gaming is for us in developing countries, piracy always flourished and made gaming accessible to the majority.

  • @ayoubmorjane7722
    @ayoubmorjane7722 Před 10 měsíci

    I had one. They called it the king of tigers where I lived. It had nes games along with Arabic language English counting and other educational games

  • @ionracer6723
    @ionracer6723 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Man, I want to have this console right now!

  • @yqisq6966
    @yqisq6966 Před 10 měsíci

    Excellent assortment of bgms ;)

  • @staticshocker69
    @staticshocker69 Před 10 měsíci

    In India we had 3 major NES clones. Polystation (PS1 body), Terminator 2 (Sega body) and Gold Leopard King which was this keyboard system.

  • @loganford3921
    @loganford3921 Před 11 měsíci

    This is new to me and I enjoyed this video. It's reminds me of a Computer or a PC that could play Sega Mega Drive games in the 90s here in the UK.

    • @jimbotron70
      @jimbotron70 Před 11 měsíci

      The Teradrive.

    • @OCTAGRAM
      @OCTAGRAM Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@jimbotron70 Yes, but there was keyboard SEGA too. Wondering how does it compare to 16-bit IBM PC.
      Alright, I did some research. SG-1000 with 17kb RAM later evolved into SC-3000, and there were upgrades, and SC-3000 with BASIC Level III B upgrade can have at most 48kb RAM. That is hardly compared to DOS. Norton Commander 5.0 used 312 kb or so, from 640 kb real mode memory.
      On another hand we have Sega Saturn Keyboard, for 32-bit Sega Saturn, with 4Mb RAM. Now that is a thing. It is compared to Windows 95 and OS/2 Warp era, so we can think of SEGA Saturn Delphi and SEGA Saturn FAR Manager, if only it was a dominant computer, and had preemption of software. There had to be DOS Turbo Pascal in order for Delphi to appear based on it.

    • @jimbotron70
      @jimbotron70 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@OCTAGRAM These videogame keyboards weren't comparable to IBM PCs, the latter being much more powerful in terms of number crunching, still the videogame keyoboards could boast better graphics and sound.

    • @OCTAGRAM
      @OCTAGRAM Před 11 měsíci

      ​@@jimbotron70 I try to develop game in Turbo Pascal. I started with PutPixel, but it was way too much slow, so learned Assembler and EGA registers. I was reading a document that you can find by keywords "Сабанин EGA реферат". Indeed, any 8-bit Subor could do more than EGA and PC speaker. And for 8-bit I understand the memory limitation is way too strict. Levels look dull compared to DOS games, since there was not enough memory to describe every tile in the level, and packing was used.
      But I wonder about keyboard SEGA. How much memory does it have. Even if it cannot be compared to PC of same age, maybe it can be compared to early PC XT. Maybe we could have Turbo Pascal for SEGA and Norton Commander for SEGA

    • @cyberyogicowindler2448
      @cyberyogicowindler2448 Před 11 měsíci

      ​@@OCTAGRAM 8-bit games weren't always bad. E.g. "Koronis Rift" by Lucasfilm Games on Atari XL had graphics and complexity that was not reached by anything else until 386er games.