Bunny.
[edit] yup. y'all like the bunny. guess we're ending this run on a high note then. βΊοΈ

Unemployed 30-something slinger of too many words. Would happily invite people into my own little worlds if only anybody asked. I own an unwise amount of golf simulators (approaching four shelves now!) and otherwise tinker with retro computers and assorted video game nonsense.
LGBTQ+π
DOSπ
ππ©π
Bunny.
[edit] yup. y'all like the bunny. guess we're ending this run on a high note then. βΊοΈ
Installed Emudeck today, for completely normal reasons.
Velcro'd to the front seam of one of Golfshrine's four shelves is a battery-powered analog clock, built into an NES "Golf" cartridge. It doesn't outwardly even look like a clock in most photos, because it does not have face markings and the hands are quite thin. Closer inspection of the Golf Clock does reveal that it still has a circuit board inside, and looking at where the clock body goes through the cartridge case, and knowing how small the NES ROM boards actually are, I feel like there is no reason why the Golf Clock would not still function as a game cartridge. So I tried it.
(spoilers below the cut)
Popping the top cover off does in fact allow me to seat the cartridge contact into its slot, albeit not nearly as tightly as it would with the top cover. So as long as I don't accidentally wobble the cartridge, I can, in fact, make the Golf Clock play Golf. But good luck getting through a full 18 hole game.
and it's still not gonna fend off hundred degree weather. might need to figure out what all I can busy myself with that's not out in the sun room.