Satellaview: Difference between revisions

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(The service was called Satellaview, the cartridge lobby is called BS-X)
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{{system
{{Lacking Sources}}
| image= [[File:BSX1.png|An image of the Super Famicom with the BS-X add on.|200px]]
 
{{Infobox System
| image= [[File:BSX1.png|200px]]
| type= Console add-on hardware
| type= Console add-on hardware
| released= {{release|jp= November 21, 1990}}
| released= {{Release|JP= April 23, 1995}}
| media= Downloadable Content, rewritable ROM cartridge
| media= {{List|Downloadable content, Rewritable ROM cartridges}}
}}
}}
The '''Satellaview''' was a peripheral for the [[Super Famicom]] that enabled the downloading of magazines, games and other media by way of satellite broadcasting services provided by Japanese satellite radio company [[St. GIGA]]. The peripheral, co-developed by Nintendo Research & Development 2 and St.GIGA, was released on April 24, 1995.<ref>https://actaludologica.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/05-UEMURA-MAGO-%E2%80%93-AL-1-2018.pdf</ref> Broadcasting services for the Satellaview were discontinued on June 30, 2000.<ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20020619232027/http://nnm.nikkeibp.co.jp/nnm/2002/06/NNM20020610_193.html


The '''Satellaview''' was an add-on piece of equipment for the [[Super Famicom]]/[[Super Nintendo]] gaming systems.
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One could access the Satellaview service via the [[St. GIGA]] satellite station between 4:00-7:00 PM. The user was required to have a subscription to the St. GIGA station as well as a BS tuner in order to operate the Satellaview. During this time, a player could download and play games. The BS system broadcasted for 5 years, up until June 2000. A very large catalog of games previously released in cartridge format as well as a few new games was made available for download through the service. A deluxe package came with a rewritable 8-megabit memory card that plugged into a slot on the top of the boot cartridge. Without such a cartridge, the BS-X cartridge saves downloaded content to its 512 KB of built-in memory <ref>[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Satellaview Wikipedia article on the Satellaview]</ref>" .
 
A feature called SoundLink allowed the use of streaming music or voice clips (most famously used in ''BS The Legend of Zelda: Ancient Stone Tablets'') while playing a game.


The ''Legend of Zelda'' games that were released were ''[[BS The Legend of Zelda]]'', ''[[BS The Legend of Zelda: Ancient Stone Tablets]]'', and a [[The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past#Satellaview Broadcasting_System|port of ''A Link to the Past'']].
==Features==
The Satellaview's services could be accessed via the St. GIGA satellite station between 4:00 and 7:00 PM. The user was required to have a subscription to the St. GIGA station, as well as a BS tuner in order to operate the Satellaview. During this time, users could download and play games. The BS system broadcasted for five years, up until June, 2000. A large catalog of games previously released in cartridge format, as well as a few new games, was made available for download through the service. A deluxe package came with a rewritable 8-megabit memory card that plugged into a slot on the top of the boot cartridge. Without this cartridge, the BS-X cartridge saved downloaded content to its 512 KB of built-in memory.


Along with other and earlier game download services, the Satellaview service paved the way for modern downloadable content distribution, which allows the purchase and download of full retail games as well as original download-only titles, much as the Satellaview allowed.
A feature called SoundLink allowed the use of streaming music or voice clips, most famously used in {{AST}}, while playing a game.


==Trivia==
==Satellaview ''The Legend of Zelda'' Games==
* The first 6 [[dungeon]]s in the first BS The Legend of Zelda quest are in the shape of a letter. When put together, they spell out S t. G I G A  (St. GIGA), the company that provided satellite service for the Satellaview. The other two Dungeons are in the shape of a Skull (Dungeon 7) and an Arrow pointing down (Dungeon 8)
*{{BSTLoZ}}
* Similarly, the Second Quest's dungeons spell "[[Nintendo|NiNtENDO]]".
*{{AST}}
*{{ALttP}} (port)


{{Ref}}
{{Ref}}


[[Category:Systems]]
{{Categories
[[Category:Nintendo systems]]
|Nintendo Systems, Systems
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Latest revision as of 14:52, 13 May 2023

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The Satellaview was a peripheral for the Super Famicom that enabled the downloading of magazines, games and other media by way of satellite broadcasting services provided by Japanese satellite radio company St. GIGA. The peripheral, co-developed by Nintendo Research & Development 2 and St.GIGA, was released on April 24, 1995.[1] Broadcasting services for the Satellaview were discontinued on June 30, 2000.[2]

Features

The Satellaview's services could be accessed via the St. GIGA satellite station between 4:00 and 7:00 PM. The user was required to have a subscription to the St. GIGA station, as well as a BS tuner in order to operate the Satellaview. During this time, users could download and play games. The BS system broadcasted for five years, up until June, 2000. A large catalog of games previously released in cartridge format, as well as a few new games, was made available for download through the service. A deluxe package came with a rewritable 8-megabit memory card that plugged into a slot on the top of the boot cartridge. Without this cartridge, the BS-X cartridge saved downloaded content to its 512 KB of built-in memory.

A feature called SoundLink allowed the use of streaming music or voice clips, most famously used in Ancient Stone Tablets, while playing a game.

Satellaview The Legend of Zelda Games

References