this post was submitted on 11 Mar 2025
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~~Iam not super knowledgeable about vintage consoles but i do know gamedev theory. Games are designed to look good on the hardware of its time so an old crt will look better then a modern lcd. Do the people that own these actually want this?~~
~~Of course there is always the cool technical puzzle to make old tech work with new but if this was just that it wouldn’t be a market product.~~
Is this a hdmi adapter that makes vintage games look like they are supposed to on a modern display? Can anyone vouch a comparison video, thats very cool.
I have one of those external adapters talked about in OP. I don't really follow why an external plug is a problem because I don't spend much time looking at the back of my GameCube, but that wasn't the question so I'll move on.
The interesting thing about the GameCube is that, at least on the original production model (DOL-001), it has native digital video out. As such, these HDMI adapters are able to convert losslessly in the fully digital domain. Notably, this feature was dropped on the Wii, so with zero modifications, you can get a sharper image out of a GameCube than a Wii.
At least on my external adapter, there's no kind of post-processing going on, you're just getting the raw, native resolution (usually 480p) pixels over HDMI, so the result is a very clean, emulation-style pixel-perfect image.
Whether that's desirable will certainly vary from person to person, but even if you don't want that, it's a good starting point to do video capture or add any fancy upscaling or filtering that you want with other hardware between the GameCube and your TV/monitor.