Kubilak wrote: ↑Sat Apr 18, 2026 1:15 am
What may
NOT be fine are the extras that they bolted on top of this:
- HDMI video processing / scaling lag
- Controller parts (is it Seimitsu like real AES controllers, or cheaper chinese garbage?)
- Do carts have ROMs or flash (e.g. NAND which slowly degrades and you end up losing/corrupting whatever is stored there eventually)
A few questionable things on this list. The quality of plastic on the AES and its stick were... not good. If you are trying to buy an AES now you are sorting through a bunch with cracked chassis — moreso than I've seen with any other retro console. As far as the plastic on the controllers, it creaks quite a bit on every one I've touched. The plastic on both is actually an opportunity to be much better than the original, which I hope they take.
There's also room for improvement when it comes to the stick and buttons, which, despite being Seimitsu, do not match the feeling of full-size Seimitsu parts on a larger stick or real arcade panel.
At $90 each I agree it's very unlikely that they're using mask ROM for the carts, though EEPROMs are possible. But if they do go NAND, while this will be worse than the original, it's par for the course for every cart-based system since the Nintendo DS to use NAND. Still, at $90/cart it's hard to complain, and I think NAND at that price versus mask or EEPROMs at a significantly greater cost is a very reasonable decision for them to have made.
Controller lag isn't likely to be an issue (unless you're using wireless controllers, which are optional, and even then could be as low as 1ms if they use a good implementation) since they're going with the original DB15 ports, and it wouldn't make any sense to not just wire the inputs directly like the original (and would likely affect compatibility with previous accessories).
The HDMI scaling is, IMO, the biggest potential stumbling block. If they can match the CPS2-DigiAV as a lagless solution (possible, given that they will have direct access to digital video), then great. But regardless, RGB + an outboard scaler will be an option, and possibly better than the original AES given the not-great RGB quality of the AES unless modded (and even then, some people could never get rid of jailbars).
Overall, the fact that they got Furrtek and Jotego deeply involved gives me a lot of hope, and from everything that has been revealed, they have made great choices with their approach to this machine. The only ones I really disagree with are: 1. not making the wired stick available for separate purchase; 2. going with the modern rather than OG layout for the Neo Geo CD.
Given that the device comes out in 7 months, I am sure they will be trickling out more information about all of these things to maintain the hype, so we'll see. Waiting to preorder until a real review drops is perfectly reasonable, and in most cases, the smart thing to do.