I remember seeing this whole fiasco go down. Plenty of people tried to get the word out it was a scam. Years later a different company came along and actually did make their own custom console that uses cartridges, it's called the Evercade. There's a Duke Nukem collection coming out later this year.
Well, sort of. Evercade cartridges are just SD cards with extra pins available in case future carts needs extra I/O to function and the console hardware is a pretty standard ARM SOC, so the costs of R&D and logistics of getting the components are much lower than something like the proposed VGS.
Nowadays we already had a real Coleco Chameleon/Retro VGS done right a.k.a. The EverCade. It's a retro system that support both retro and indie games and could play them in both handheld and console form and used cartridges as its media. Only thing different between the EverCade and the Chameleon was that all games are released as collection rather than individual games on the EverCade and could be updated to fix bugs and add additional patches such as remap options, filter options, and other qol features.
I remember when all of this went down. I just wonder what they were hoping to accomplish with this. Just another crowd fund and run scam I guess. Seems like trying to drag Coleco's name into the mud was their ultimate downfall. Good decision by Coleco acting as they did.
This scam was popularized by some major retro gaming UA-camrs as well. I saw early on how unlikely the whole thing was, just major suspicions. They are actually one of the major reasons I have never invested in any crowd funded consoles. I get it that people need money to launch their projects, but "concepts only" are not good investments.
A handful of UA-camrs that specialize in retro gaming got conned as well. Really sad and unfortunate because they were really looking forward to seeing the Coleco Chameleon come to fruition, only to get shafted.
The funny thing about glitch free games is that no game is glitch free especially back in the cartridge days. Final Fantasy 1 and 6 have long list of bugs on oversights(early revisions of FF3 US has a glitch that can corrupt your save memory and the only way to fix it is to disconnect the battery). Pokemon Gen1 is notoriously buggy. DKC2 has a glitch that bricks your cartridge in a similar way to the Sketch glitch.
Mike Kennedy and co. approached several engineers during its development, including people like Kevtris (known for developing Analogue's FPGA products), to provide cores for their console but lacked enough funding and cheapened out. I guess they planned to pay more up front had they were able to raise the crowdfunded money. But since they fell way short of the goal, it was only a matter of when, not if, the project would collapse.
I’m thinking “why on earth would you not make a unique shell design?” I know, save money, but they wanted to raise nearly $2,000,000 just to look like another unsuccessful game console? Stupid all around
Attaching the Coleco name to it was the perfect scum icing on this scam. I can't even imagine how they thought they'd get away with it. There's has to be something to deliver to consumers to get away with it in the first place!
Was in correspondence with Mike regarding an interview. Unfortunately, the SNES Sydney Hunter in the prototype thing dropped and he declined. I think many alternative consoles try to run business like Nintendo or Sony. But, you never have the time, money and faithful customer base that entails.
I like the idea of cartridges. It encourages developers to avoid careless glitches we see these days and helps to avoid rushing games to the market. But yeah, it just isn't super viable these days.
I remember this scam like it was yesterday. Had I been a lawyer, I would have filed a class-action suit against the scammers to refund the money they stole and sentenced them to prison for defrauding the investors.
Intellivision Amico much? I actually read the book about the whole Coleco Chameleon debacle and I'm not surprised it didn't come out. Mike Kennedy is/was an ideas guy first and foremost. He never really put any effort into his many, many failed projects, expecting people to do his job for him.
it seems to have disappeared from the net, but i remember a picture of mike kennedy kneeling and smiling next to one of the giant blocks of metal that were the atari jaguar injection molds.
I remember this. I had only been collecting a couple of years, but even I knew how sketch this was. Funny enough the Coleco Chameleon name is used for a hombrew SD cartridge. One can play the ColecoVision library, the SG 1000, and a few other systems I'm not familiar with. I ordered it last week I'm waiting for it now. But people have been very happy with it.
You didn't mention one of the most bonkers fact of this, they didn't buy the shell mold from Atari they bought it from a company that made dental equipment. The shell was used in a dental drill housing, there are pictures of it. Atari sold the mold a long time ago and they don't know who. It was sold as a lot to someone that just bid on it. It just happened to be bought at one point by that dental place. These guys found the shell and decided to make a games console. I wish they would have just sold cases for mini PCs, like have been done with C64 shells. The Jaguar console actually looks really cool, and they could have made money that way and maybe hired some hardware developers and then went to kickstarter. I wonder who owns the molds now. . .
The trouble with projects like this, and the Amico is that the people behind them have all these pie in the sky ideas for something only to quickly find out that making those ideas a reality is much harder than it looks. But it's too late. They already made their promises, and they got the ball rolling full speed ahead, but can't really deliver. Suddenly your "affordable" retro system that's supposed to bring gaming back to the glory days is much more expensive, and can't do most of the things you promised it would.
Cartridges actually have good reasons to make a comeback now, as filesizes have become bigger and load time reduction becomes more of a need. Archival and industrial storage is moving from disks back to tapes now. I'd imagine the same will happen with games. Blu-Ray won't really be enough going forward, and people do love physical games. Flash memory is gonna be what replaces Disks in gaming, I think. It's cheap, fast enough to keep up with SSDs, and can hold more than enough data for a modern AAA title.
Crazy how many scam indie consoles there have been. Even back before crowdfunding there was stuff like the Phantom, another one with a wonderfully ironic name. Chameleon is notable for the sheer debacle of their fake stunts but I don't anything can top the audacity of the OTON X, the console with advanced AI that made games for you! In 2016. These days you can run a lot of console games on an FPGA thanks to the enormous effort put behind the MiSTer project. But back in 2015 a lot of the FPGA cores for more advanced systems had not been done, let alone made open source. So the Chameleon people would have had to do that work themselves which is a pretty tall order for people who can't even prototype some ICs on a board. It was pretty clear that this was never going to happen.
Nice summary of the whole thing. If anyone's interested in the nitty-gritty, Slope's Game Room has a deep dive that gets really granular. As to whether a cartridge based system could succeed. I would posit the Evercade as an example that it, in fact, can. Of course the Evercade does have the ability to update both the hardware and the software on the cartridge,. With bugs being inevitable, you kind of need to have some method to fix them when they happen.
Today, with a 3D Printer, a circuitboard printing service and all the components you can easily buy, to make a prototype it's really not difficult and expensive anymore. The only thing you need is knowledge in electronics and coding. Anything else is nothing special anymore. And if they don't even get this... It's straight up dumb...
2:30 - Wasn't it proved that Atari didn't have a working VCS when they started? Wasn't it just emulation to monitor with a shell? I believe that kicked up a LOT of dust back when the VCS first started.
Between the VCS, Amico and Chameleon it seems like every pre-Famicom console needs to be tied to some dubious new piece of hardware. When are we going to get the Magnavox Odyssey Cubed?
Great video!! Pojr, I am curious about your thoughts on the Evercade. That is a cartridge based retro system that seems to have caught on with old school video game fans and collectors of physical media.
I've been burned enough times on Kickstarter now to never want to touch it again. I got a pebble watch ok and even the metal version, but it never really lived up to the hype. I also got the very expensive kit bike for kids. Infento. Honestly high quality stuff, but fiddly and a pain. And we just haven't even used it. Then I went for the voice assistant that wasn't Google/Alexa and after about 3 years that was finally cancelled. And at some point I also paid for a drone that never materialised. So enough for me!
i remember hearing about this back when it was brand new, what a disaster! Great video as always, not sure a huge amount of people are aware of this topic these days
I used to listen to a colecovision podcast up to the point where kennedy found the molds for the jaguar and then he left the show....the show hasn't done much since.
Mike Kennedy was offering more than Tommy TalliAMICO ever did. The Coleco Chameleon offered an amazing 16 bit library in a tested medical grade console shell. More than a footbath that glowed ever did.
I think I missed something. Were they going to make NEW "retro" games for this thing? Or were you able to play well known retro titles? I've never understood why things like the Raspberry Pi can exist since I would assume the games are copyrighted, no? Also great video as always.
@@tonyrichards254 right good point. So does that somehow bypass all the copyrights of the games? I wonder if they are even enforced. I mean, the likelihood of someone finding a Rampage machine and putting quarters in it that get back to Bally Midway at this point seems very unlikely. I doubt they care too much if their game is emulated so people can play at home. But when it comes to Nintendo games or PS games, I would imagine copyright could come into play, no?
Emulation itself is not illegal. The games themselves are still copyrighted, so they would have needed licenses and distribution deals to use those games. New games could be (and are) produced for old consoles. If someone were to try to do this today, they'd likely try to take the Mister project and commercialize it further than it is already. It's a working execution of a similar idea but without the cartridge bit.
Hopefully you caught up on sleep... As many pointed out, a retro cartridge based console CAN be successful. Ask the Evercade. I myself am looking to pick up one, as I'm getting tired of the monetization focus of mobile gaming.
This basically came down to the engineer behind this project being a liar, and Mike Kennedy, the main lead of this project, being an overly trusting gullible idiot. In essence, Kennedy asked his engineer if he could do this, was told "easy-peasy" then faked progress along the way, lying to Kennedy NOT ONCE catching on before eventually it was far too late for the Chamelon but also Kennedy's reputation and even his livelihood. Mike Kennedy was never a bad person, just a bad leader who trusted the wrong person and didn't look into things that seemed fishy. The whole thing should have never happened. Kennedy should have spotted this guy is a liar almost right away and canned the project then and there, or else fired him and replaced him with someone who could have actually got the job done.
I appreciate you covering this fiasco, but I really can't agree with "cartridges are obsolete". Surprised you haven't heard of the Evercade which did this idea correctly and seems to be doing well enough financially with it. That's proof there are a lot of people who still like collecting carts, and don't agree with the modern "ship it now and patch it later - maybe" mentality. The Atari 2600+ is also generating a lot of positive buzz due to its focus on real carts.
Awesome video! Coleco Chameleon, Intelivision Amico, and a few others that turned out to be duds. This one takes the cake though. Total scam. Amico was at least a real deal, just not managed properly.
when kickstarters at least come with a product i dont call this a big scam. its a scam when they fail to deliver any product like we saw sometimes. personally i would never invest anything in a kickstarter project. its like rolling a dice. those spending money there should know very well they are taking a chance. complaining after is dumb to me. just not invest in any kickstarter project if you dont want lose your money.
The Retro VCS/ Coleco Chameleon saga was one of the funniest fiascos I have ever witnessed. Just about everyone particularly the ones involved in the project like Gamester81 etc, was at each others throats once the thing fell through and Mr Kennedy was deemed satan. 😂hilarious
I was always suspicious of this. I did like how they got the shell molding tho. The only real/legit retro console that's been released as of late is the MISTER. And I'm still waiting for a real consolized version of it
I disagree with the comment on cartridges. Homebrews are made today for retro consoles and they are fine. It is possible to make a game that is mostly if not totally bug free and release it on cart. It simply needs to be tested a bit more. Also, I remember when this went down too. No, it was never going to see the light of day.
You could always make a game on a cartridge with rewriteable flash and get some level of patchability that's probably still best avoided as much as possible. Using actual mask ROMs is probably not sensible economically unless you somehow plan to sell hundreds of thousands of them.
I'm a retro fan and for me part of the fun is owning and playing on the original hardware I just dont see the point in something like this you could just buy an android box
Whenever people talk about the good ol days of no dlc, patches, etc I'm just like "Yeah... but that means if a game that sucked, it sucked FOREVER. And we bought Street Fighter II multiple times" As for a retro style console being viable? I guess it depends on the price point. The Evercade seems to be doing well enough, but it emulates games and each cartridge is basically a classic game collection.
I remember seeing this whole fiasco go down. Plenty of people tried to get the word out it was a scam. Years later a different company came along and actually did make their own custom console that uses cartridges, it's called the Evercade. There's a Duke Nukem collection coming out later this year.
Well, sort of. Evercade cartridges are just SD cards with extra pins available in case future carts needs extra I/O to function and the console hardware is a pretty standard ARM SOC, so the costs of R&D and logistics of getting the components are much lower than something like the proposed VGS.
I like cartridges
@@dodgeramsport01Same 😊
@@jackmcslay You're one of those kids who can't stand to be the duller one in the room.
Ah Atari Age, before they got bamboozled by Tommy Tallarico and Intellivision with the Amico.
I keep seeing this mentioned following the atariage takeover. I guess i need to google this as my interest is now peaked.
Nowadays we already had a real Coleco Chameleon/Retro VGS done right a.k.a. The EverCade. It's a retro system that support both retro and indie games and could play them in both handheld and console form and used cartridges as its media. Only thing different between the EverCade and the Chameleon was that all games are released as collection rather than individual games on the EverCade and could be updated to fix bugs and add additional patches such as remap options, filter options, and other qol features.
Except Evercade uses software emulation instead of FPGA.
@@ZachAttackIsBackTechnically the Coleco Chameleon didn't use FPGA either. ^_^
what about uzebox. it was made in 2008 and its a retro console made with off shelf parts and most importantly its opensource
@@ZachAttackIsBack Why does it matter if its FPGA or Software emulation?
@@விஷ்ணு_கார்த்திக் Generally, FPGA is more accurate than software emulation.
I remember when all of this went down. I just wonder what they were hoping to accomplish with this. Just another crowd fund and run scam I guess. Seems like trying to drag Coleco's name into the mud was their ultimate downfall. Good decision by Coleco acting as they did.
I remember the coleco chameleon controversy. That thing was a mess. It was sort of funny how they wanted to use Jaguar molds for their fake console
And using a re-branded Wii U Pro controller.
I am in no way for this console but I dont see an Issue in using the Jaguar molds! And keep in mind that the PS2 design was originaly an ATARI design!
@@dodgeramsport01the only problem I would have especially with this product is that they were trying to trigger nostalgia in people to scan them
This scam was popularized by some major retro gaming UA-camrs as well. I saw early on how unlikely the whole thing was, just major suspicions.
They are actually one of the major reasons I have never invested in any crowd funded consoles. I get it that people need money to launch their projects, but "concepts only" are not good investments.
_This video is a public service to our gaming history._
The scammers want us to forget, so they can keep trying to scam us with something else.
You should look in to the Intellivision Amico. Now that's a rabbit hole...
Their mother must be proud.
A handful of UA-camrs that specialize in retro gaming got conned as well. Really sad and unfortunate because they were really looking forward to seeing the Coleco Chameleon come to fruition, only to get shafted.
2am is practically mid-afternoon
I recently found your channel and I'm really enjoying the content. I look forward to each new video. Have a great day!
The funny thing about glitch free games is that no game is glitch free especially back in the cartridge days. Final Fantasy 1 and 6 have long list of bugs on oversights(early revisions of FF3 US has a glitch that can corrupt your save memory and the only way to fix it is to disconnect the battery). Pokemon Gen1 is notoriously buggy. DKC2 has a glitch that bricks your cartridge in a similar way to the Sketch glitch.
Mike Kennedy and co. approached several engineers during its development, including people like Kevtris (known for developing Analogue's FPGA products), to provide cores for their console but lacked enough funding and cheapened out. I guess they planned to pay more up front had they were able to raise the crowdfunded money. But since they fell way short of the goal, it was only a matter of when, not if, the project would collapse.
I remember Pat the NES Punk ripping this thing to shreds back when his podcast was worth a damn.
Why isn’t it anymore?
Idk why but i just LOVE retro tech
i didn't grow up with it, or play any retro games, but still
i just cannot stop watching these videos
Same here! I even find it more fascinating than modern games
I’m thinking “why on earth would you not make a unique shell design?” I know, save money, but they wanted to raise nearly $2,000,000 just to look like another unsuccessful game console? Stupid all around
Tooling for shells is expensive. Still a scam of course.
Attaching the Coleco name to it was the perfect scum icing on this scam. I can't even imagine how they thought they'd get away with it. There's has to be something to deliver to consumers to get away with it in the first place!
Tommy Tallarico: Attaching classic IP names, You say!
Wait, the Coleco Chameleon was released?!
1.95 million is enough to move to a non US extradited country and live comfortably.
Was in correspondence with Mike regarding an interview. Unfortunately, the SNES Sydney Hunter in the prototype thing dropped and he declined. I think many alternative consoles try to run business like Nintendo or Sony. But, you never have the time, money and faithful customer base that entails.
I have just found your channel and am really enjoying the content. How haven't you blew up? You deserve way more subscribers.
I like the idea of cartridges. It encourages developers to avoid careless glitches we see these days and helps to avoid rushing games to the market. But yeah, it just isn't super viable these days.
I remember this scam like it was yesterday. Had I been a lawyer, I would have filed a class-action suit against the scammers to refund the money they stole and sentenced them to prison for defrauding the investors.
Had you been a lawyer, you wouldn't be doing that.
@@prezidenttrump5171 I've done my research. It falls in line with what a Ponzi scheme is.
Intellivision Amico much?
I actually read the book about the whole Coleco Chameleon debacle and I'm not surprised it didn't come out. Mike Kennedy is/was an ideas guy first and foremost. He never really put any effort into his many, many failed projects, expecting people to do his job for him.
At least they can make and sell the jaguar shells . If they really even the injection molds .
it seems to have disappeared from the net, but i remember a picture of mike kennedy kneeling and smiling next to one of the giant blocks of metal that were the atari jaguar injection molds.
As someone who actually owns the SNES Jr., this is a real laugh. Lol
I remember this. I had only been collecting a couple of years, but even I knew how sketch this was.
Funny enough the Coleco Chameleon name is used for a hombrew SD cartridge. One can play the ColecoVision library, the SG 1000, and a few other systems I'm not familiar with. I ordered it last week I'm waiting for it now. But people have been very happy with it.
You didn't mention one of the most bonkers fact of this, they didn't buy the shell mold from Atari they bought it from a company that made dental equipment. The shell was used in a dental drill housing, there are pictures of it. Atari sold the mold a long time ago and they don't know who. It was sold as a lot to someone that just bid on it. It just happened to be bought at one point by that dental place. These guys found the shell and decided to make a games console. I wish they would have just sold cases for mini PCs, like have been done with C64 shells. The Jaguar console actually looks really cool, and they could have made money that way and maybe hired some hardware developers and then went to kickstarter. I wonder who owns the molds now. . .
Most of that $2 million was for rust-proofing. You know those Colecos.
The trouble with projects like this, and the Amico is that the people behind them have all these pie in the sky ideas for something only to quickly find out that making those ideas a reality is much harder than it looks. But it's too late. They already made their promises, and they got the ball rolling full speed ahead, but can't really deliver. Suddenly your "affordable" retro system that's supposed to bring gaming back to the glory days is much more expensive, and can't do most of the things you promised it would.
Whole Kickstarter is a scam. They take your money and you cant refund.
Ok.. managed to chargeback. Took 2 months of waiting..
Provided all history, made screenshots and so on :)
Cartridges actually have good reasons to make a comeback now, as filesizes have become bigger and load time reduction becomes more of a need. Archival and industrial storage is moving from disks back to tapes now. I'd imagine the same will happen with games. Blu-Ray won't really be enough going forward, and people do love physical games. Flash memory is gonna be what replaces Disks in gaming, I think. It's cheap, fast enough to keep up with SSDs, and can hold more than enough data for a modern AAA title.
The Amico actually beats this in the scam area... And Phil Adam was involved with both scams... Isn't that something? His mother would be proud....
Crazy how many scam indie consoles there have been. Even back before crowdfunding there was stuff like the Phantom, another one with a wonderfully ironic name.
Chameleon is notable for the sheer debacle of their fake stunts but I don't anything can top the audacity of the OTON X, the console with advanced AI that made games for you! In 2016.
These days you can run a lot of console games on an FPGA thanks to the enormous effort put behind the MiSTer project. But back in 2015 a lot of the FPGA cores for more advanced systems had not been done, let alone made open source. So the Chameleon people would have had to do that work themselves which is a pretty tall order for people who can't even prototype some ICs on a board. It was pretty clear that this was never going to happen.
Cartridges are not obsolete.
Tallarico and Intellivision looked at this and yelled: "Hold my beer...while we hold your deposits!!"
Nice summary of the whole thing. If anyone's interested in the nitty-gritty, Slope's Game Room has a deep dive that gets really granular.
As to whether a cartridge based system could succeed. I would posit the Evercade as an example that it, in fact, can. Of course the Evercade does have the ability to update both the hardware and the software on the cartridge,. With bugs being inevitable, you kind of need to have some method to fix them when they happen.
Today, with a 3D Printer, a circuitboard printing service and all the components you can easily buy, to make a prototype it's really not difficult and expensive anymore.
The only thing you need is knowledge in electronics and coding.
Anything else is nothing special anymore. And if they don't even get this... It's straight up dumb...
Another great episode/review, thanks.
I don't know why, but seeing you smile always makes me smile, too. It's kind of adorable.
Can you make a video on Ecco Jr (spin-off of Ecco the Dolphin) and Shadow Dancer (spin-off of Shinobi)?
2:30 - Wasn't it proved that Atari didn't have a working VCS when they started? Wasn't it just emulation to monitor with a shell? I believe that kicked up a LOT of dust back when the VCS first started.
Between the VCS, Amico and Chameleon it seems like every pre-Famicom console needs to be tied to some dubious new piece of hardware.
When are we going to get the Magnavox Odyssey Cubed?
What game is it at 5:06 ?
They may not been able to make a machine using the Jaguar case but I bet they are driving a Jag now 😂
Great video!! Pojr, I am curious about your thoughts on the Evercade. That is a cartridge based retro system that seems to have caught on with old school video game fans and collectors of physical media.
I've been burned enough times on Kickstarter now to never want to touch it again. I got a pebble watch ok and even the metal version, but it never really lived up to the hype. I also got the very expensive kit bike for kids. Infento. Honestly high quality stuff, but fiddly and a pain. And we just haven't even used it. Then I went for the voice assistant that wasn't Google/Alexa and after about 3 years that was finally cancelled. And at some point I also paid for a drone that never materialised. So enough for me!
i remember hearing about this back when it was brand new, what a disaster!
Great video as always, not sure a huge amount of people are aware of this topic these days
2:00 AM? That is dedication! Thank you Pojr
Oh yeah I remember this. What an absolute embarrassment. Great job on recapping it. Keep up the great work Pojr 👍
I used to listen to a colecovision podcast up to the point where kennedy found the molds for the jaguar and then he left the show....the show hasn't done much since.
I definitely think a product like this is possible. I just think the people behind THIS project didn't know how to do it and just took advantage
What game is at the lower left at 2:52?
Pier Solar and the Great Architects.
@@8_BitThank you.
i never realized it but your content is good for the soul.
major props and thank you
I came across the Coleco Chameleon just when it died. I still don't quite understand the selling point on that thing.
Mike Kennedy was offering more than Tommy TalliAMICO ever did. The Coleco Chameleon offered an amazing 16 bit library in a tested medical grade console shell. More than a footbath that glowed ever did.
$350 for a low production run device like this is not unreasonable.
I remember listening to Giant Bomb back in the day about this.
I think I missed something. Were they going to make NEW "retro" games for this thing? Or were you able to play well known retro titles? I've never understood why things like the Raspberry Pi can exist since I would assume the games are copyrighted, no? Also great video as always.
The Raspberry Pi is a small multipurpose computer. People often set it up as an emulation machine, but that is far from its only purpose.
@@tonyrichards254 right good point. So does that somehow bypass all the copyrights of the games? I wonder if they are even enforced. I mean, the likelihood of someone finding a Rampage machine and putting quarters in it that get back to Bally Midway at this point seems very unlikely. I doubt they care too much if their game is emulated so people can play at home. But when it comes to Nintendo games or PS games, I would imagine copyright could come into play, no?
Emulation itself is not illegal. The games themselves are still copyrighted, so they would have needed licenses and distribution deals to use those games.
New games could be (and are) produced for old consoles.
If someone were to try to do this today, they'd likely try to take the Mister project and commercialize it further than it is already. It's a working execution of a similar idea but without the cartridge bit.
Yah but the Jamma goes unchecked
This was a fun deal to follow. Just kept going more and more south. Great coverage.
Hopefully you caught up on sleep... As many pointed out, a retro cartridge based console CAN be successful. Ask the Evercade.
I myself am looking to pick up one, as I'm getting tired of the monetization focus of mobile gaming.
It is a pity that such a cool name was wasted on a scam.
This basically came down to the engineer behind this project being a liar, and Mike Kennedy, the main lead of this project, being an overly trusting gullible idiot.
In essence, Kennedy asked his engineer if he could do this, was told "easy-peasy" then faked progress along the way, lying to Kennedy NOT ONCE catching on before eventually it was far too late for the Chamelon but also Kennedy's reputation and even his livelihood.
Mike Kennedy was never a bad person, just a bad leader who trusted the wrong person and didn't look into things that seemed fishy.
The whole thing should have never happened. Kennedy should have spotted this guy is a liar almost right away and canned the project then and there, or else fired him and replaced him with someone who could have actually got the job done.
The jaguar would make an awesome mister case
I agree! Why put an SNES in a jaguar shell when you could put a mister in?
Guys it’s Pojr coming at us with another video!
Such a shame. It looks good and the name is great. The potential there with a good team is fantastic. Clearly a scam.
Why is it light out if it’s 2am
This is what happens when you underestimate Internet nerds.
Karma karma karma karma karma chameleon
I can program a pi with 20,000 retro games in a few hours. You can buy them online. Every console is included.
A LOT of projects on Kickstarter is a SCAM. North of 30%. Kickstarter is doing dis-service (sinister) by hiding the numbers of failed projects.
This should've been called, "Retrogate", or "Colecogate".
So basically they were pretending to be MiSter before MiSter was a thing
I appreciate you covering this fiasco, but I really can't agree with "cartridges are obsolete". Surprised you haven't heard of the Evercade which did this idea correctly and seems to be doing well enough financially with it. That's proof there are a lot of people who still like collecting carts, and don't agree with the modern "ship it now and patch it later - maybe" mentality. The Atari 2600+ is also generating a lot of positive buzz due to its focus on real carts.
It's funny because it was an OLD PCI capture card too, wouldn't work in a remotely modern PC.
Awesome video! Coleco Chameleon, Intelivision Amico, and a few others that turned out to be duds. This one takes the cake though. Total scam. Amico was at least a real deal, just not managed properly.
I think you could count as a fake prototype the thing that Jhon Carlseen tried to pass as a wip unit in his weird video
The scam, before the scam of the Amico !
(Such a shame)
when kickstarters at least come with a product i dont call this a big scam. its a scam when they fail to deliver any product like we saw sometimes. personally i would never invest anything in a kickstarter project. its like rolling a dice. those spending money there should know very well they are taking a chance. complaining after is dumb to me. just not invest in any kickstarter project if you dont want lose your money.
The Retro VCS/ Coleco Chameleon saga was one of the funniest fiascos I have ever witnessed. Just about everyone particularly the ones involved in the project like Gamester81 etc, was at each others throats once the thing fell through and Mr Kennedy was deemed satan. 😂hilarious
I was always suspicious of this. I did like how they got the shell molding tho. The only real/legit retro console that's been released as of late is the MISTER. And I'm still waiting for a real consolized version of it
i knew of this one...a true scam on par with the intellivision amico indeed
When it comes to Kickstarter video game projects, Donor Beware. 🤨
Calling your fake console "Chamelleon" is either genius or insane.😂
I disagree with the comment on cartridges. Homebrews are made today for retro consoles and they are fine. It is possible to make a game that is mostly if not totally bug free and release it on cart. It simply needs to be tested a bit more.
Also, I remember when this went down too. No, it was never going to see the light of day.
You could always make a game on a cartridge with rewriteable flash and get some level of patchability that's probably still best avoided as much as possible.
Using actual mask ROMs is probably not sensible economically unless you somehow plan to sell hundreds of thousands of them.
I wanna take you for a ride 🎶
I'm a retro fan and for me part of the fun is owning and playing on the original hardware I just dont see the point in something like this you could just buy an android box
Whenever people talk about the good ol days of no dlc, patches, etc I'm just like "Yeah... but that means if a game that sucked, it sucked FOREVER. And we bought Street Fighter II multiple times"
As for a retro style console being viable? I guess it depends on the price point. The Evercade seems to be doing well enough, but it emulates games and each cartridge is basically a classic game collection.
Chameleon indeed.
Superb and very interesting video, again! Amazing work, Pojr!! You can be very proud of yourself! Keep it up! 🎉😊👍
Interesting story. Another good video POJR.
It's 3am here
Gamessshhh, patchessshh, releasesshhh. Geez dude, the way you pronounce those words hurts my ears(ssshhh)
Yeah cartridges are not obsolete.
Gee....sounds like the personalities of as certain recent ex-President....deny everything....
You outran me 😂 I was working on a video about this for my docu series on my retro channel. it's a french one but still 😅
Just make a direct translation.
Who will know?
@@SoulforSale I am more professional than this 😉
Kickstarter has scams?! :)
Great video!
Well at least the name fit the console lol!
An FPGA is _not_ emulation.
Nice bouffant.