I agree
But this device is supposed to retail at $150, which seems reasonable to me for something with those added controls (a paddle-style joystick that twists, trackball, and num pad). To me, that seems like a reasonable price and places it above most of the emulation devices, because it's offering something that I can't just get from any other SBC device.
Of course not everyone is going to have that same preference. (Also of course I think a lot would depend on what the final build quality looks like.)
I agree about the hobby being too expensive. The only systems I don't emulate are ones that I have owned for a long time (way back before things got as expensive). And I typically use flash carts instead of hunting down original games for the same reason.what I think is woah another overly expensive tat I got no need for.
Like man retro gaming is stupidly over expensive hobby where they makes limited super expensive mini consoles. Or some one does a new console that play retro games that costs 200-500 bucks.
Or you want to buy an upscaler but they cost 300+ dollar.
And people wonder why I rather emulate than use real hardware well duh playing PS1-2 would cost me a fortune a good CRT that not a big ass 500kg tv, like a 14 inch Sony trinitron will cost me 500-1000 bucks or as I said uppsacler 300+ My rent is 600 bucks your telling me a bloody uppscaler is half my damn rent. When emulators is 100% free.
But this device is supposed to retail at $150, which seems reasonable to me for something with those added controls (a paddle-style joystick that twists, trackball, and num pad). To me, that seems like a reasonable price and places it above most of the emulation devices, because it's offering something that I can't just get from any other SBC device.
Of course not everyone is going to have that same preference. (Also of course I think a lot would depend on what the final build quality looks like.)