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Atari 2600 — The Console That Brought the Arcade Home | RetroReplay Museum
The Atari 2600 brought Space Invaders, Pac-Man, and Pitfall into the living room. It defined what a games console could be and sold 30 million units. The joystick it popularised... Lire plus...
Nintendo Wii — The Console That Brought Gaming to Everyone | RetroReplay Museum
The Nintendo Wii outsold both the PS3 and Xbox 360 with motion controls and Wii Sports. It brought gaming to millions who had never picked up a controller — and... Lire plus...
Xbox 360 — Microsoft's Finest Hour | RetroReplay Museum
The Xbox 360 was Microsoft's finest hour. Launching a year ahead of PS3, it defined HD gaming, perfected Xbox Live, and delivered one of the greatest game libraries of any... Lire plus...
Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) — The Console That Saved Gaming | RetroReplay Museum
After the video game crash of 1983 wiped out the industry, Nintendo arrived with the NES and rebuilt it from the ground up. Super Mario Bros., Zelda, Metroid — the... Lire plus...
Sega Saturn — The Misunderstood Masterpiece | RetroReplay Museum
The Sega Saturn was extraordinary at 2D gaming and home to some of the rarest, most valuable games ever made. Commercially outmanoeuvred by PlayStation, it became one of gaming's greatest... Lire plus...
Microsoft Xbox — The Console That Brought PC Power to Your Living Room | RetroReplay Museum
Microsoft's audacious debut in gaming. The original Xbox was enormous, powerful, and came with Halo. It invented Xbox Live and changed online console gaming forever. Lire plus...
Nintendo GameCube — The Purple Lunchbox That Delivered | RetroReplay Museum
The Nintendo GameCube was underestimated and underloved in its time. But its library — Metroid Prime, Wind Waker, Resident Evil 4, Melee — is among Nintendo's finest. Collectibility is rising... Lire plus...
Nintendo 64 — 64-Bit Magic & the Birth of 3D Gaming | RetroReplay Museum
The Nintendo 64 gave us Super Mario 64, Ocarina of Time, and GoldenEye. It invented 3D gaming as we know it — and its library remains among the greatest ever... Lire plus...
RetroReplay Museum — The History of Gaming Consoles
From the Magnavox Odyssey in 1972 to the PlayStation 5 in 2020 — explore the complete history of gaming consoles through the RetroReplay Museum. Every era, every icon, every legend. Lire plus...
Super Nintendo (SNES) — The Golden Age of 16-Bit Gaming | RetroReplay Museum
The Super Nintendo Entertainment System defined an era. With a library of timeless classics and hardware ahead of its time, the SNES remains one of the most beloved consoles ever... Lire plus...
Sega Dreamcast — Gaming's Greatest Tragedy | RetroReplay Museum
The Sega Dreamcast was innovative, powerful, and ahead of its time. It had online gaming, a VMU with its own screen, and a library of classics. It deserved better. Sega's... Lire plus...
Sega Mega Drive — Blast Processing & the Birth of Cool | RetroReplay Museum
The Sega Mega Drive was faster, louder, and cooler than anything that came before it. It took on Nintendo, invented gaming attitude, and produced a library of classics that still... Lire plus...
Sony PlayStation 1 — The Console That Changed Everything | RetroReplay Museum
The Sony PlayStation didn't just enter the console market — it conquered it. Discover how a failed Nintendo partnership became the most disruptive console launch in history. Lire plus...
Sony PlayStation 2 — The Console That Changed Everything | RetroReplay Museum
The PlayStation 2 is the best-selling video game console of all time with over 155 million units sold. Discover its history, iconic games, and why it remains the crown jewel... Lire plus...
Xbox One — Microsoft's Controversial Comeback | RetroReplay Museum
The Xbox One launched with controversial DRM policies that damaged its reputation. But Microsoft course-corrected, introduced Game Pass, and built a strong software lineup that redeemed the generation. Lire plus...
PlayStation 4 — Sony's Dominant Generation | RetroReplay Museum
The PlayStation 4 sold 117 million units and delivered God of War, Spider-Man, Horizon Zero Dawn, and Bloodborne. Sony's most commercially successful console defined a generation of gaming. Lire plus...
PlayStation 3 — Sony's Ambitious Comeback | RetroReplay Museum
The PS3 launched at a punishing price point with a notoriously difficult architecture. But Sony's persistence paid off — The Last of Us, Uncharted, and Metal Gear Solid 4 made... Lire plus...
Neo Geo AES — The Rolls-Royce of Retro Consoles | RetroReplay Museum
The SNK Neo Geo AES was identical to SNK's arcade hardware — true arcade-perfect gaming at home, at an extraordinary price. Its cartridges are among the most valuable in gaming... Lire plus...
PC Engine / TurboGrafx-16 — The Console That Was Ahead of Its Time | RetroReplay Museum
The NEC PC Engine was tiny, powerful, and years ahead of its time. The first console with a CD-ROM add-on, a library of extraordinary shooters and RPGs, and one of... Lire plus...
Atari 7800 — Atari's Last Stand in the Console Wars | RetroReplay Museum
The Atari 7800 was technically capable and backward compatible with the 2600, but Nintendo's dominance and a weak software library left it a footnote in gaming history. A rare and... Lire plus...
Sega Master System — Europe's Favourite 8-Bit Console | RetroReplay Museum
The Sega Master System was technically superior to the NES in almost every way. Crushed by Nintendo in North America, it thrived in Europe and Brazil — where it outsold... Lire plus...
ColecoVision — The Arcade King of 1982 | RetroReplay Museum
The ColecoVision was the most powerful home console of 1982, delivering near-arcade-perfect ports of Donkey Kong and Zaxxon. The video game crash of 1983 cut its life short, making it... Lire plus...
Mattel Intellivision — The Smarter Console | RetroReplay Museum
The Mattel Intellivision was technically superior to the Atari 2600 and pioneered realistic sports games. It sold 3 million units and gave Atari its first serious competition. Lire plus...
Magnavox Odyssey — Where It All Began | RetroReplay Museum
The Magnavox Odyssey was the world's first home video game console. No sound, no colour, no score — just two paddles and a ball. Released in 1972, it planted the... Lire plus...
Sega Game Gear — Colour, Backlit & Battery-Hungry | RetroReplay Museum
The Sega Game Gear had a colour backlit screen when the Game Boy was still monochrome. It ate six AA batteries in five hours and sold 11 million units. A... Lire plus...
PlayStation Vita — Technically Brilliant, Commercially Underserved | RetroReplay Museum
The PS Vita was technically extraordinary — a gorgeous OLED screen, dual analogue sticks, and genuine console-quality hardware. Sony's failure to support it with first-party games left it to indie... Lire plus...
PlayStation Portable (PSP) — Sony's Ambitious Handheld | RetroReplay Museum
The PSP sold 80 million units and delivered console-quality gaming on the go. Its widescreen display, multimedia capabilities, and library of genuine console experiences made it Sony's most successful handheld. Lire plus...
Nintendo DS — Dual Screens, Touch Input & 154 Million Units | RetroReplay Museum
The Nintendo DS sold 154 million units — the best-selling handheld of all time. Dual screens, touch input, and a library that included Pokémon, Brain Training, and New Super Mario... Lire plus...
Game Boy Advance — SNES Quality in Your Pocket | RetroReplay Museum
The Game Boy Advance delivered SNES-quality gaming in your pocket. With 81 million units sold and a library including Pokémon, Metroid Fusion, and Golden Sun, the GBA is one of... Lire plus...
Game Boy Color — Colour Comes to the Pocket | RetroReplay Museum
The Game Boy Color brought colour to Nintendo's handheld line in 1998, arriving alongside Pokémon Yellow and Gold & Silver. Backward compatible with the entire Game Boy library, it extended... Lire plus...
Nintendo Game Boy — The Handheld That Started It All | RetroReplay Museum
The Nintendo Game Boy sold 118 million units across its lifetime. Tetris. Pokémon. Link's Awakening. The Game Boy defined portable gaming for a generation and its legacy endures in every... Lire plus...
Xbox Series X — Microsoft's Most Powerful Console Ever | RetroReplay Museum
The Xbox Series X is Microsoft's most powerful console ever. Game Pass, four generations of backward compatibility, and raw performance make it a formidable machine — and a statement of... Lire plus...
PlayStation 5 — The Current Pinnacle of Console Gaming | RetroReplay Museum
The PlayStation 5 represents the current pinnacle of Sony's console lineage. Near-instant load times via its custom SSD, the DualSense controller's haptic feedback, and a growing library of extraordinary exclusives... Lire plus...
Nintendo Switch — The Console That Goes Everywhere | RetroReplay Museum
The Nintendo Switch is a home console that becomes a handheld. Breath of the Wild at launch. Mario Odyssey. Animal Crossing. One of the best-selling consoles of all time and... Lire plus...