![]() ![]() The PC Engine GT / Turbo-Express was a very rare handheld model of the original hardware, in the same vein as the Sega Nomad (a portable Sega Genesis / Mega Drive). However, it was rushed to a 1989 market in Japan lacking much of its promised features with only seven titles exclusively made for it, ending up a commercial failure to be binned and discontinued not long after. ![]() NEC planned to enhance the system further, announcing the 'PC Engine 2' that would later become the PC Engine SuperGrafx. The PC Engine, on the other hand, was a whole different story, beating out the Famicom when it first came out long enough to compete against its rival's own successor and gave little focus for the Mega Drive who was instead posing more of a threat to Nintendo in North America. When it first launched in North America, the TurboGrafx-16 was largely seen as a failure blamed on poor marketing by the manufacturers. The PC Engine Duo / Turbo-Duo combined the add-on into the unit with more RAM as yet another failed attempt to relaunch the failing console in the West. The joint venture, formed in North America as TTI, made an add-on called the PC Engine CD ( PCE-CD) / TurboGrafx-CD ( TG-CD) that loaded games from discs instead, much like the Sega CD but better supported. The European versions varied throughout the countries, being the western version in Spain and United Kingdom and Japanese models in Benelux regions. When it came time to seek other potential markets, the two companies eventually caved to a limited American release in 1989 under a completely different model and name: the TurboGrafx-16. The CPU was teamed up with a 16-bit graphics processor and 16-bit video color encoder chip, both built by Hudson Soft. It had a Hudson Soft HuC6280 8-bit CPU at 7.16 MHz and 1.79 MHz with 8KB of RAM and 64KB of VRAM. ![]() The PC Engine ( PCE) was a 16-bit system released jointly by NEC and Hudson Soft in Japan on Octoand in the US on August 29, 1989. NEC PC-Engine / TurboGrafx - Downloads - Emulators ![]()
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