Century 16

TechEruo Century 16 is the first home video game console in the Century series. It was developed by TechEruo. In North America, it was distributed by Nintendo in the first third of the consoles lifespan, although, in 1992, TechEruo now distributed it themselves.

History
Century 16 was launched in 1990, in Eruowood with the price of $259.99. The console features 4-player controller ports, 16-bit color graphics, 64MB max cartridge. It has similarities to Sega Megadrive/Genesis. The US manufacturing was originally in Louisville's GE Manufacturing, but was moved to TechEruo's new New Orleans US office/manufacturing plant in 1991, it can easily be told apart judging by the serial numbers "C16-000" and "C16-001-NOLA". European (or really any PAL region, besides Eruowood) GE consoles are extremely rare and cost $10,000 in Eruowoodian dollars.

Hardware Specs

 * Resolution: 288x224 px

Peripherals
The peripherals were sold separately from the consoles.


 * Century CD - A CD accessory.
 * Century Stick - An arcade style controller.
 * Century Turbo - A turbo controller.
 * Power Play Port - An adapter for playing Pal System games.
 *  - A piano controller.
 * NES Link - A module that allows Licensed NES games to be played on a Century 16.
 * Save Pack - A memeroy cartridge for Century CD games that support saving without passwords.
 * Type Texter - A typewriter controller. Used for some Century CD games.

Game library
The Century 16 has over 700+ games.

Reception
The console was well received among both critics and consumers. It was the first success TechEruo has outside of Eruowood, it rose the company into fame through the decade along with the TechEruo System.

Trivia

 * This was the first video game console to support S-Video output.
 * The Century 16 Classic was released March 14, 2020 at stores still open during the early stages of the Coronavirus and had a full roll out on June 21, 2020.
 * By the time after it was discontinued, the final manufacturered consoles were sold for $5 Eruowoodian dollars.
 * The NES Link has some minor clocking issues if you plug in an NTSC cartridge.
 * This was due to it originally being intended for PAL-M consoles and the NTSC compatibility being last second.
 * Unlicensed NES games, R.O.B., Zapper, and Power Pad games are not compatible with the Century 16's NES Link module.