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The Japan only upgrade for
the Nintendo 64 was the Disk Drive. In the picture above, it is the
system latched to the underside of the Nintendo 64. Read more here.
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The four of the six standard controller colors. The other colors were grey and black. Special colors in later bundles were officially labled Atomic Purple, Grape, Jungle, Smoke, Fire, and Berry. NUS-005.
Originally retailed for
$29.99
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Extreme Green controller.
Was packaged with a standard color system, AV cables and power cord
for $149.99 USD.
Toys R Us exclusive
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Nintendo 64 Donkey Kong 64 controller. Nintendo Power subscriber premium. NUS-005
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Nintendo 64 Mad Catz Fishing
Controller
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Nintendo 64 Mini race controller
by Performance/Interact
Originally retailed for
$29.99
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Mad Catz Arcade/Flight Stick for Nintendo 64
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Power source
of the Nintendo 64. The weight was distributed to the system, and
not the wall. Problems with the external power supply were easily
resolved without taking apart the system. NUS-002
Input 120V
24W 50Hz Output 3.3V 2.7A/12V .8A
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RF Switch for the N64 with
Modulator.
NUS-003 Modulator
NES-003 RF Switch
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On the right side of
each North American released game was a panel that showed what piece
of equipment each game could support (or require) such as:
Expansion pack, Rumble
pack, Memory pack, 1-4 controllers (signified by outline), and the
ESRB rating.
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Nintendo
64 cartridges came in a variety of different colors. Colors were gold,
grey, black, blue, red, yellow, and green. Another scheme was for
Pokemon Stadium 2 where the top of the cartridge was gold with
silver specks and the bottom was silver with silver specks.
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Sample complete game: Box,
Cartridge, Warning pamphlet, Nintendo Power Subscription Card, and
Instructions.
Some early Nintendo 64
games had cardboard inserts to hold the cartridge during shipping
while later games had 'holders' made from cardboard glued into the
box.
Some games like Mario
Kart 64 and Killer Instinct Gold had quick reference cards.
First run Zelda: Ocarina
of Time games had a hologram cover.
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Pokemon Stadium Set $69.99
USD
Box, Game, Instructions,
and Transfer Pack
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Hey You Pikachu Set $79.99-89.99
USD (controller not included)
Box, VRU, Game, Instructions,
Mini Card, Nintendo Power Sub. Card, VRU Instructions, Warning Manual
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Sample Japanese Import game:
Box, Game with plastic tray, Instructions, and quick reference card. Japanese N64 games did not have shrinkwrap around the box.
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Cartridge Adapter that allows
games from other regions of the world to play on the North American
Nintendo 64.
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The Nintendo 64 Expansion
pack was released in order to give certain games an extra 4 megs
of RAM to run. The total megs were 8. The games that required it
were Donkey Kong 64 (offered as a pack in), Zelda: Legend
of Majora's Mask, Perfect Dark (65% of the game) and
it could be left in the Nintendo 64 in order to help smooth out
other games. NUS-007
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The
lever that came with the expansion pack to remove the jumper
pack. |
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4mB Jumper Pack that was
sold with each system except the Donkey Kong 64 Jungle Green
unit. NUS-A-TA/NUS-008
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GB Hunter: plays Game
Boy games on your Nintendo 64.
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The Nintendo 64 controller
pak was designed to be a memory card. It had 123 pages of memory
in order to save the games that didn't have a back up battery. NUS-004
Originally retailed for
$19.99
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The N64
transfer pack. Allowed data to travel from games like Pokemon
and Perfect Dark for the Game Boy. Pictures
were supposed to be able to be placed upon enemy face in Perfect
Dark, but then the Columbine incident happened. Sold separately
or packaged with Pokemon Stadium. Also works with Mario
Golf and Mario Tennis. NUS-019
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Rumble Pack.
Sold separately or packaged with Star Fox 64 when it debuted.
NUS-013
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Sold through
the Nintendo Power Supplies catalog, this 'CD pouch' didn't actually
hold CDs. It held up to 4 Nintendo 64 games with memory cards. The
logo on it is the Nintendo Sports logo.
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Sample carry
case for the N64 by ALS
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Blaze Technology's MPXchanger
that allowed you to download and upload game saves from your Playstation
and Nintendo 64 memory cards and your Gameboy
games via your PC and the Internet. You can also use it to program
and upload Pocketstation games.
There was also an adapter that allowed you to use Dreamcast
VMU's. For the price you paid, you got simple instructions, a
drivers disc, the input unit (parallel cable) and AC adapter. List
price $19.99. Windows ME & 98.
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+ @ -
Input: AC 120V 60Hz
9W
Output: DC 9V 500mA
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The Dex Drive by Interact
allowed you to take gamesaves from your Nintendo 64 memory card and
upload to your computer for storage and online upload and download
of saves. Connected through the serial port of your computer.
PC Pentium 75 or higher,
Windows 95/98, NT 4.0. 8mg RAM, 2 mg HD space available, serial port.
(It says you should also have a 2x speed CD Rom drive, but since the
drivers are on floppy discs, I don't know why....)
Originally retailed for
$39.99
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- @ +
Input: AC 120V 60Hz
3.5W
Output: DC 12V 150mA
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