10/18/2023 0 Comments System shock box art making of![]() ![]() The (sometimes loose) inspiration here is System Shock, an early FPS-RPG. The cases allow you to display them without making your game room look like your garage shelving.This is just a test to see how malleable the Cortex Command setting that I'm working on is. MVS is a cheap way to play a system you love without resorting to emulation. I think most people who buy these boxes do so for the same reason I did. I could care less about insertion marks or wear on my AES collection. This isn't really about being a collector for most. A stack of crappy white, black, blue, and translucent pieces of plastic with torn/missing labels looks like shit. Personally, I have spent a great deal of time and effort making my game room visually appealing. As in, I never take them to my local arcade vendor. I have owned my AES since release, so when I started buying MVS for the savings, they became home carts. When my friends want to switch out the games in my cabinet, I don't have to fumble around to figure out what the game without a readable label is, or what that japanese writing represents. Plus many of my MVS carts had the labels scratched off. It also protects from inadvertant liquids, like a plumbing leak, a drunk at a party, or my two year old with a sippy cup. I live in Tucson, so a layer of dust pretty much gathers on everything. Dust on the leads means dust into the motherboard. I don't think people are talking about sliding them onto a shelf when they talk about protection.
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