you can switch the backs if you have a gamebit. Super Metroid was one of the most common demo carts at electronics stores back in teh early 90's. Thats what was everywhere over here when I was a kid. Sears, KB Toys, Electronics Boutique, Toys R Us. They all had this in their SNES demo.
you can switch the backs if you have a gamebit. Super Metroid was one of the most common demo carts at electronics stores back in teh early 90's. Thats what was everywhere over here when I was a kid. Sears, KB Toys, Electronics Boutique, Toys R Us. They all had this in their SNES demo.
Actually, from what I heard by some die hard NFR collectors, these barcodes (some product numbers?) have unique codes for that specific game
you can switch the backs if you have a gamebit. Super Metroid was one of the most common demo carts at electronics stores back in teh early 90's. Thats what was everywhere over here when I was a kid. Sears, KB Toys, Electronics Boutique, Toys R Us. They all had this in their SNES demo.
Actually, from what I heard by some die hard NFR collectors, these barcodes (some product numbers?) have unique codes for that specific game
Hmm even if that is true who can read the bar codes? Someone could buy this demo cart and make a Earthbound demo with it. Who would know the difference?
A barcode reader will translate a barcode into numbers but it won't tell you what those numbers mean. Does the bar code on NFS games match the UPC code on the retail box?