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Tiger Game.com

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{{Template:Infobox console|image = [[FileImage:Tiger_Game.com_anterior.jpg|thumb230px]]|256pxManufacturer = Tiger Electronics|Generation = Fifth generation|Release date = September 1997|Media type = ROM cartridge}} [[Nintendo]] had just proven with the Japanese Pokemon craze that its nearly 10-year-old [[Game Boy]] still had the ability to dominate the handheld market without even trying, keeping themselves afloat despite problems with their two most recent console releases, the [[ Nintendo 64]] and [[Virtual Boy]]. After the [[R-Zone]], Game.com was Tiger Electronics’ second attempt at jumping in the handheld video game market. The Tiger Game.com existsfeatured many new ideas for handheld consoles and was aimed at an older target audience, sporting PDA-style features and functions such as a touch screen and stylus. Unlike other handheld game consoles, the first Game.com console included two slots for game cartridges (the second revision reverted to a single cartridge slot) and could be connected to a 14.4 kbit/s modem. It was the first handheld to enable Internet connectivity and use a touch screen and stylus. It brought several new ideas to the table, but its scope outpaced the available technology, its marketing was atrocious, and its games list was small and based solely around recognizable name brands. This article is in need It was very much ahead of written contentits time, as the [[Nintendo DS]] successfully borrowed many ideas from it 7 years later.
==Hardware==
It has at least one processor<gallery spacing="small" captionposition="within">Tiger Game.com anterior.jpgTiger Game.com posterior.jpgTiger Game.com left side.jpgTiger Game.com top.jpgTiger Game.com bottom.jpg</gallery>{| border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1" class="article-table" style="width: 500px;"|-! scope="col"|Item! scope="col"|Specifications! scope="col"|Additional data|-|Processor|Sharp SM8521 8-Bit CPU|[http://www.alldatasheet.com/datasheet-pdf/pdf/146252/SHARP/SM8521.html HERE]|-|Display|200 x 160 2-bit 3.5" reflective grayscale LCD||-|Audio|Monaural 8bit PCM with FM Synthesis||-|Controls|Four (A, one monochromatic reflective liquid crystal displayB, C, and D) face buttons, digital directional pad, three menu interface buttons (menu, sound, and several other componentspause)||-|I/O ports|Serial COMM port||-|Media|Tiger Game.com ROM cartridges|NOW PRINTING|-|Dimensions|190 x 108 x 19 mm||}
==Add-ons==
There's a modem.
==Variants==
There also exists at least one The [[Tiger Game.com Pocket Pro]] is a revision of the Tiger Game.com, in a smaller form factor, with multiple casing color options, though the display remained grayscale. With a significantly smaller form factor, the Pocket Pro variant has but a single cartridge slot, while the original Game.comwas equipped with two slots, and uses two AA cells, compared to the four AA cells used by the original model.[[Category:Handheld]]

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