View allAll Photos Tagged Game
This game room is a funky multi-use room for family fun! Smoky gray walls with black trim and lipstick red accents create a striking space.
-Design by Champagne Chic Interiors
If you have the opportunity to play this game of life you need to appreciate every moment. A lot of people don`t appreciate the moment until it's passed.
Kanye West
Happy birthday to me. My new Logitech G910 Orion spark keyboard from my wife and son, love you guys ;)
Inspired by the brotherhood of the Night’s Watch, Take the Black Stout was made to be deep, dark and complex like those who have sworn the oath to defend Westeros against threats from the north. The label depicts the Weirwood tree where Jon Snow recited the oath before joining the Night’s Watch
Scene that we made for iplay - Deadtime stories game.
Collage: me
Overpaint: Sergey Lesiuk (http://nitro-killer.deviantart.com/)
I never liked look and play collective games then why I like so much collective games area ? really I could say I don't know.
but if I am really sincere, it is probably because I have always been rather a bad player. Anyway, these places give off a good energy.
This is the same serie as previous shoot
As part of what I've sometimes jokingly reffered to as being "the generation raised on video gaming", I've certainly owned my share of video game consoles and peripherals of various sorts.
Both ones that were popular and easy to find, others, not nearly so common place in nature.
The video game stuff pictured here represents the latter of the two things.
In fact, I'm fairly sure this kind of stuff doesn't tend to turn up on Ebay much at all.
Every last thing pictured here in unlicensed, and is all for the Super NES/Super Famicom.
all told, it's 3 video game enhancers (much like the Game genie) and one NES/Famicom to Super NES adapter. (Actually, also let's Super Famicom games be played as well, not that I ever owned any import games.
From left to right, it foes as follows...
"Game Wizard" by Innovation
(Basically the US equivalent of the UK made Pro Action Replay (the original PAR, not the 2nd one).
"Game Mage" by Leisure
(Of Asian origin... possibly China, if i recall... designed for the Super Famicom, not the American Super NES, but since Nintendo used a physical lockout rather than a software one on the Super NES & Super Famicom, much like with their N64, it was just more a matter of making the thing fit in your Super NES. It accepted both foreign and US Super NES games, and used the exact same codes that the Game genie used, but unlike the Game genie, also came with cheat codes built-in for some games.
"Pro Action Replay 2" by Datel (A game enhancer made in England).
Unlike other game enhancers (including their own Pro Action Replay 1) this puppy let you plug in up to 100 cheat codes at a time, thereby essentially letting the gamer re-write entire sections of the game program code. It came with a book loaded full of codes already, plus like the original PAR, it contained a "trainer" mode, which let a gamer devise their own codes by using methods to track which part of the game code you wanted to change. Using this thing, I was able to sometimes (though not always) carack which part of the program code in fighting games controlled the character data for which fighter you're selecting. Hence, I sometimes was able to get fighting games with no official boss code listed let me play (often glitchy in nature at best) as unplayable "boss" characters, like Shang Tsung and Goro in MK 1 on Super NES. But, it barely worked before glitching for those particular codes in that game.
"Super 8" by Innovation
With this, you could play both NES and Famicom games as well as Super Famicom games on an American model Super NES. It came with no instruction manual, since the only instructions one needs is listed right on the outside of the box. I have no idea of whether or not this would work on a redesigned model Super NES.
Here are a sampling of War game cards from a set that I've saved since I was a kid. I love the artwork of the characters.
A family heads to the subway after an outing in Central Park. 72nd Street, Manhattan, New York.
Canon EF 135mm f/2L USM
©2012 Patrick J Bayens
Another take on the parts from Snoof yielded two rahter different frames. I immediately fell in love with the crab frame. Suddenly I have an use for all those eyes from my mixel sets!
This immature bald eagle put on its game face, and turned and burned toward the surface of the Susquehanna.
Not a game I have vivid memories of and the rulebook doesn't bring back any memories either. I think the Daleks suckered me into buying in!
Half-life 2, Cinematic mod 2013, 3200x1800 / Sweet Fx / Console tweaks
alternative version: steamcommunity.com/sharedfiles/filedetails/?id=264358643