
What happens to day and night?
>>1
New model PS3
>>2
Please make it a PS5.
>>1
Defeated by heat
Made into a hot plate.
Legendary with upscaling function.
>>3
Because of this, I still can’t let it go.
I’m not playing right now, but I feel like I’ll want to play someday.
I think it’s terrible that there was a competition to see which would break first, the early model 360 or the other.
It’s a design flaw on both sides that it breaks from its own heat despite costing tens of thousands of yen.
Speaking of which, it seems like there were some things that the early PS3 couldn’t do…
>>7
You can play PS2 games.
Watching PS2 games through HDMI must be really nice.
Even with a new controller plugged in, it doesn’t work.
The main unit is fine, but maybe the control chip or something has gone bad.
The hot plate topic is nostalgic.
I dislike this because it’s hard to get on.
Cat’s response
It broke around the time the third generation PS3 was released.
It was mentioned that if the solder has just come off, warming it with a hairdryer might fix it, but I haven’t tried it.
I remember lamenting that everyone had died before the PS2 I bought a long time ago.
Right now, there are HDMI converters available for each console, you know.
I still have it at my parents’ house, but I wonder if it will boot up…
You can sell junk for around 3000 yen.
It’s difficult at second-hand shops around there.
I was an idiot for buying it used, but within about a month, it overheated from my own heat and became unplayable. I paid a non-official Sony repair shop online, and it broke again after about a month, so I really don’t want to see this hardware anymore.
My data for Idolmaster 2 and Yakuza Ishin…
It brings back memories of Gundam Musou.
The earliest PS3 felt like it was being sold not as a gaming console, but as a multimedia device.
And it sold.
The early models have both Cell and RSX, along with the PS2’s EE+GS, so it’s no surprise that they get so hot.
Heating device
The Cell CPU was a legendary piece of equipment used in servers and supercomputers.
>>28
It’s the forerunner of many-core.
In an era where the strengths and weaknesses of Wii, PS3, and Xbox 360 are excessively large, it’s no wonder the console wars are heating up.
My friend said that if you play games without the air conditioning on in the summer, it will stop working.
The Cell was certainly good, but it was a bit too extravagant for use in game consoles and consumer TVs.
An amazing one that can also play PS2.
I’m still using it while getting it repaired.
I wonder if they’ll refuse to repair it anymore?
There are still games on PS3 that I haven’t been able to get the trophy completion for.
It’s DuckTales Remastered, which sold over a million copies at Capcom and is among the top 100 in sales.
Clearing the highest difficulty level is just really too difficult.
The manufacturer repair for the PS3 is already finished, right?
The DVD playback ability has gotten weaker.
There are many things that can only be played on PS3, so I want to take good care of them.
Well, this is something that can be said about game hardware in general during this period.
The DVD might be broken.
The initial model PS3 and PS5 are lined up, so I can cover the PS series.
I was planning to give it to a friend, but now that I think I can play the PS2 game, I’m starting to regret it.
It only recognizes the keyboard.
I thought only the early model had backwards compatibility, but I didn’t know that you could play on models other than the early one with the PS1.
>>42
Chronicles of the X68000 Dracula port or finding out that it works properly on PS3 ends up increasing its premium value.
Archive this for the purpose of archiving.
It’s in the closet, but it seems like it would break if I take it out, so I won’t take it out.
SACD player! Isn’t it an SACD player!
>>46
I couldn’t read it anymore, so I bought a proper player.
It’s wonderful that there is no fan noise.
Perfect for playing PS2.
Can I connect just the HDMI to the PS5 VR2 and watch PS3?
The old VR for PS4 could be viewed with a 3D TV.
The later production models, like the Box〇, don’t break at all.
If we had put this out from the beginning, everyone would have been happy.
>>50
I bought the first version of the box and the second generation of the PS3, so both have become huge ornaments…
The box ◯, being an initial model, doesn’t even have HDMI…
>>51
Because of this, I went out of my way to buy a TV with a D terminal…
Looking back now, I should have replaced it with the later model.
>>62
Our TV in my room is still a CRT, so the picture quality doesn’t improve.
I was using a D-sub conversion cable to output HD on my PC monitor…
It’s just like junk anyway.
I think I’ll pull it out and try to repair it.
I remember modifying it by cutting out the case, putting on a heatsink, and replacing the fan.
The 60GB repaired before Sony’s official deadline has become too precious to use.
Back then, it seemed like both the boxes and PS3 had little know-how, and it became normal for solder cracks to occur due to heat…
Many people probably placed it in a small space thinking it was just like previous game consoles, especially since it has weak heat dissipation in the first place.
>>58
Ah, until the PS2, I used to just leave it on top of the video deck, and sometimes I would even stack books or videos on top of it…
Once it is warmed up, it gets better, but it’s just a temporary fix and will break again soon.
A machine that can rip SACD.
>>64
I found out that mine is impossible, so I don’t want to do anything today.
Firmware this and that.
An era when we could be impressed by the evolution of graphics in next-generation consoles.
People said the power consumption of the PS3 was high, but now that I look at it, it’s not that high.