- Joined
- Oct 20, 2024
- Messages
- 3,594
- Solutions
- 17
- Reaction score
- 11,507
- Points
- 6,177
- Location
- Buenos Aires, Argentina 🇦🇷❗
This was a bit of a lifesaver back in the dawn of the retro gaming (and retro-game-collecting) days, especially as tools to open consoles and cartridges were expensive and hard to get without going online, resulting on you having to either endure international shipping for a set or making-do with whatever else you had available at the time, dramatically increasing the risk of damaging your stuff.
Basically what you did was to get a simple plastic pen in contact with your ovenhob until it started to melt, then you'd take the still-hot plastic and press it hard on the target screw until the pen shaped itself like it. After that, you'd wait until it got cold and hardened and... Voila! You had your very own, homemade, one-of-a-kind console/cartridge opening tool.
I did this for a few stubborn NES and SNES games and was amazed by just how well it did the job.
We really did have to get creative at the time, and we were better off for it.
Basically what you did was to get a simple plastic pen in contact with your ovenhob until it started to melt, then you'd take the still-hot plastic and press it hard on the target screw until the pen shaped itself like it. After that, you'd wait until it got cold and hardened and... Voila! You had your very own, homemade, one-of-a-kind console/cartridge opening tool.
I did this for a few stubborn NES and SNES games and was amazed by just how well it did the job.
We really did have to get creative at the time, and we were better off for it.