
Manufacturer: AtGames
Release Date: August 2017
MSRP: $59.99
When it comes to playing classic games on a portable system, I usually stick with the real deal or use my PSP to emulate them. I just so happened to come across a portable Sega Genesis emulator, and it seemed fairly solid. It had licensed and original games ranging from Sonic the Hedgehog 2 to Mortal Kombat and Altered Beast. This was a spur-of-the-moment buy, and I didn’t do much research.

I can’t say I don’t regret my purchase, but I did at first. When you open the box, you don’t get any fancy packaging like you would from a first-party company. It’s the game player in a cardboard tray, a loosely packed USB cable, and a manual tossed in. I realized it was probably a Chinese knock-off, but still of some sort of quality.
The system itself is extremely light, and some would say it feels cheap. We are used to the weight of portable systems like the PSP, GBA, or even DS. This has no moving parts and only needs a small battery. It has a 2.8″ 4:3 screen, which is perfect for these older games as widescreen was not a thing at home at the time. The D-Pad rolls rather than rocks, which are nice for fighting, and it includes A, B, and C buttons as well as X, Y, and Z, which are used for a fighting game. There’s a start button and a menu button, as well as an on and off switch. All the essentials are there, and the buttons feel quite nice, and I was pleased.
The screen itself is of surprisingly decent quality. The game looks great, and I didn’t experience only washed-out visuals like on some cheaper players. The biggest issue, hardware-wise, is the speaker, as it’s really bad. If you only turn the volume up about 3/4’s, it’s not so bad, but all the way up, it sounds blown out and tinny. Thankfully, these older games don’t need surround sound or anything, but a slightly better speaker would have been nice. Thankfully, it sounds way better with headphones on, and the sound is quite nice and can get pretty loud. Shame on you, AtGames, for such an easy oversight.
Software-wise, the menu lacks any flair. It looks like a third-party emulator menu with a list of games and a box shot next to it. You can flip through the 85 games, and they play! Surprisingly, at great speed, I had no slowdown or any crashing as of yet. The major software issue was with the SD card and loading your own ROMs.
It states to put a “game” folder on the SC Card and use.bin Genesis ROMs. That’s easy enough; however, no matter how many different cards I used, the system would not read the files. I tried formatting it as exFAT, FAT, FAT32, etc., and Google didn’t really come up with much. I found a small comment somewhere stating that Windows 10 does not format the cards properly and doesn’t play nice with this player. I had to download drive partitioning software, and it finally read the cards. This is just absolutely absurd and a huge oversight by AtGames. Clearly, their SC Card driver is awful, and 99% of users who buy this system won’t know how to do this.

With that said, it loads games on the SD cards, and I didn’t run into any issues. There are a few games that won’t play on here, but they are more obscure titles, but all your popular go-to ones will.
Overall, this is a decent player if you’re a hard-core Genesis fan. Albeit, you can emulate these games on your PC or even a PSP and a DS if you have the hardware for it. However, when you get a Genesis kick, it’s not to pull out a dedicated player and pump out some time real quick or pull it out of your backpack while on break or something. Maybe their 2018 model will fix these major issues, but the hardware itself is pretty nice.



















Yep! The fact that I forgot about this game until you made a comment proves that.