Our favorite customers rejoice that the Evercade EXP, like its ancestors Evercade and Evercade VS, will effortlessly seduce the most skeptical.With its high-res IPS screen, integrated WiFi, increased button count (we’ll still notice the absence of six buttons on the front despite the presence of Street Fighter 2), it’s already making a solid argument for fans retro gamebut apparently its TATE pattern is finally convincing.
Therefore, it will be possible to play the myth shmup What was the original format for 1942 and 1943, and of course the arcade version. These are just two of the fifteen games that will be preinstalled directly on the machine:
- 1942 (arcade version)
- 1943 (arcade version)
- 1944: Master of Loops (Arcade Version)
- Bionic Commando™ (Arcade Edition)
- Captain Commando™ (Arcade Version)
- Commando™ (Arcade Edition)
- Final Fight™ (Arcade Version)
- The Forgotten World™ (Arcade Edition)
- Ghouls ‘n Ghosts™ (Arcade Version)
- Legendary Wings™ (Arcade Edition)
- MERCS (arcade version)
- Street Fighter II’: Super Fight (Arcade Version)
- Strider (arcade version)
- Vulgus™ (Arcade Edition)
- Mega Man (8 places)
- Mega Man 2 (8 places)
- Mega Man X (16-bit)
- Breath of Fire (16-bit)
Evercade EXP is of course compatible with all the cartridges from Blaze Entertainment’s previous two machines, which means more than 300 games in total.
Pre-orders will start on September 6th, before the official release on November 24th, with Just For Games making sure to release it in France.