Multicart
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-->In video game parlance, a multicart is a cartridge that contains more than one game.
Although generally associated with pirated Famicom cartridges and systems that often advertise "76-in-1," "200-in-1," "1200-in-1," and even "9999999-in-1" games, there have been legal multicarts as well over the years. Such legal multicarts for the Nintendo Entertainment System include:
- The Quattro series, from UK Codemasters (released by Camerica in the US). There were three in this series (Arcade, Adventure, and Sports), each containing four original games that fit the appropriate theme.
- Maxivision 15-in-1, which contained fifteen games from unlicensed NES manufacturers such as Color Dreams and American Video Entertainment.
- Action 52, from Active Enterprises. This ambitious project attempted to put 52 unique games into a single cartridge, but shoddy programming and heavy code reuse between games - combined with a hefty $200 (USD) retail price - resulted in perhaps the single worst NES release ever.
- Sunday Funday, from religious game developer Wisdom Tree. The last NES game released commercially in the United States, this three-in-one cartridge featured the title game (a graphics hack of Color Dreams's old Menace Beach), Fish Fall (a previously-unreleased Tetris-style puzzle game), and a karaoke program featuring a Christian pop song, "The Ride," by 4HIM.
In the world of pirate Famicom games, multicarts often advertise an inflated number of games on their labels, but in reality actually only have anywhere from five to one hundred truly unique games. The list is padded by different variations of these games, hacked to start at different levels or to start a player with different power-ups. The games are usually first-generation Famicom titles, several of which were never officially released in America, and in typical pirate fashion have either had their names deliberately misspelled, or their copyright notices/logos removed, or both.
The emphasis on NES and Famicom multicarts above should not in any way imply that other game consoles have never seen multicarts - this was simply the most prolific platform for these to appear on. Multicarts, both legal and otherwise, have appeared for many cartridge-based systems, among them the Atari 2600, Intellivision, Odyssey 2, Sega Master System, Sega Genesis, Game Boy, and Super NES. In fact, Nintendo's own Mario Party and WarioWare series play a random selection from dozens or hundreds of minigames.
More recently there have been Game Boy Advance multicarts with several GBA games and several or even hundreds of NES roms. These carts are known to include some bootlegs, hacks or variations of games, advertising them as different games and giving them incorrect box arts on the main boxart. Most of these also claim to have Pokémon games, but these are usually NES games with sprites replaced with Pokemon characters or items.
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