🎮 Odnaleziony Power Pegasus 16-bit bez tajemnic! [RG#527]

Many consider this console a legend – the 16-bit Power Pegasus – to be ours. Let's test it out and take a look inside. Will it reveal its secrets? Free PCB prototype and fast turnaround: https://www.pcbway.com 💰 SUPPORT: https://tipply.pl/u/retrogralnia https://patronite.pl/RetroGralnia https://www.youtube.com/retrogralniap... Asking about the T-shirt: https://pegasus-sklep.pl/ 🔴 SUBSCRIBE TO OUR CHANNEL! https://www.youtube.com/retrogralniap... 🔴RG DISCORD SERVER https://retrogralnia.pl/discord Nowadays, everyone knows the story of Pegasus, a clone of the Nintendo Famicom console imported to Poland by Bobmark and an icon of Polish gaming in the first half of the 1990s. However, not everyone knows that this story is not just about one clone of one console in several editions. If you weren't aware of the GameBoy clone until recently, I suspect that Aaron's recent video has already enlightened you, but Nintendo consoles aren't everything. Did you know that Pegasus also clones Sega hardware, specifically the Sega Mega Drive, and that they are sold, as is often suggested, with the tacit consent of the original manufacturer? First up, the Sega Mega Drive – a 16-bit console released in Japan in 1988, in the USA in 1989, and in Europe in a PAL version in 1990. A modern machine for its time, it outperformed its competitors, initially the 8-bit Nintendo NES and Famicom, and after the release of the 16-bit SNES, it bravely fought for dominance, though it fell behind from time to time, despite its earlier launch. Sega's hardware performed quite well in Europe, which Nintendo treated very poorly. It's no surprise, then, that in 1992 it also reached Poland, imported by Nissho Iwai Corporation Warsaw, which distributed it through several local distributors, including BobMark from 1994, the company behind the Pegasus success. Unfortunately—paradoxically, perhaps the success of the Pegasus was the reason—Segas sold very poorly in Poland. They simply lost out on price. Therefore, in 1995, while simultaneously selling the original Sega, Bobmark decided to also release a clone, which he announced at the Toy-Box '95 trade show and planned a holiday release that same year. And indeed, a certain number of these reached stores—around October-November 1995. And so, the Power Pegasus arrived. ✅ FACEBOOK: http://www.FB.com/RetroGralnia ✅ WEBSITE: https://retrogralnia.pl ✅ MUSEUM OF GAMES AND COMPUTERS OF A BYGONE ERA: https://gikme.pl 🎵 Background music:    / momentvm   #Pegasus #16bit #TheGameIsNotOver