I got into the old SNES games over quarantine last year and an proud to say that my 6, now 7-year-old took to it like a fish to water. I recently found my old Gameboy Color, too, and we've been collecting new games for it.
Apparently these cartridges have a battery for the save function (I guess I always assumed they were like jump drives) and of course at twenty-odd years out a lot of them are nearing end of life. I got a Pokemon Yellow game that keeps corrupting files saved in the in-game "computer" storage, and I suppose this is probably a symptom of a dying battery.
Anyone have experience changing the batteries? It's a simple CR2025, and I found instructions online, but the prongs are soldered in place and I hear they break easily during swap. I have no experience soldering electronics; any advice before I turn a dead battery into a totally junked cartridge?
Retaining the old data is no concern for now, like I said, it's corrupted anyway
Apparently these cartridges have a battery for the save function (I guess I always assumed they were like jump drives) and of course at twenty-odd years out a lot of them are nearing end of life. I got a Pokemon Yellow game that keeps corrupting files saved in the in-game "computer" storage, and I suppose this is probably a symptom of a dying battery.
Anyone have experience changing the batteries? It's a simple CR2025, and I found instructions online, but the prongs are soldered in place and I hear they break easily during swap. I have no experience soldering electronics; any advice before I turn a dead battery into a totally junked cartridge?
Retaining the old data is no concern for now, like I said, it's corrupted anyway
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