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76-in-1
Famicom Multi-Cart
By: The
Collector
| Origin:
Tsang Hai |
| #
of Games: 76 |
| Type:
Famicom Game Cart |
If there's one
thing certain about the Famicom pirate multi-cart market,
it's that most of the time, cartridges advertise many games,
but end up repeating titles with different names to fill the
quota. While technically the pirates are keeping their end
of the bargain, this technique is very cheap. Since the pirates
don't have anyone to answer to, though, they can do whatever
they please, so long as they get money out of it.


There
are exceptions to this certainty, however, and the 76-in-1
multi-cart is one of them. A standard Famicom pirate cart,
the 76-in-1 was created by a company called Tsang Hai. The
cover features the usual assortment of lifted art featuring
games that aren't on the cartridge (like Adventure Island,
which is definitely not on here). One would believe that this
is just another low-quality knock-off, but the facts speak
differently.

This is
hands-down one of the best multi-carts ever made, the reason
being that the pirates kept their promise. There really are
76 games on this cart, with no repeats. The selection is very
solid, featuring unheard of titles and old favorites. (it
even contains one of the Collector's personal favorites, Milk
and Nuts). Meanwhile, the plain menus, while not innovative,
are easy to navigate, and most of the titles are in their
original form (with some alterations, but nothing too bad).
This cartridge
was found at a shop called Crazy Rick's (I'm not making this
store up), located on the Saint Tomas Virgin Islands. I was
in the second grade, and my parents and I happened into Crazy
Rick's, which had a game on display that had 76 NES games
on it, many of which I never heard of. The cart came in two
parts (later identified as the Famicom game and the converter),
which I thought was odd, but I wasn't going to question it.
I believe both the converter and the cartridge cost around
$70 (though the bill was higher, because we got two Game Boy
games as well). I only found out within the last two years
that my beloved 76-in-1 was a pirate multi-cart, a fact that
I thought was really neat, since I had grown accustomed to
having it.
Look through
the screenshots to see the vast selection of quality picks.








It's also
worth mentioning that while capturing the screens for this
feature, I stumbled across one that mysteriously appeared
in my files for a 64-in1.

Everything
looks the same as the 76 version, but with fewer games (obviously).
The thing of it is, these pictures are mine, I believe, meaning
that the cartridge seemed to boot up like this without me
noticing! I've never seen this happen before and I haven't
been able to replicate this phenomenon. The Collector is genuinely
freaked out by this.
-info, all scanned,
and camera pictures for use on NES Player only
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