![]() ![]() When Wesk asked if I wanted to collaborate on this project, I was instantly hyped. Just a little over a month later, we went from rough ideas to a fully-finished build! Seeing people in love with a tiny Gamecube really hyped Wesk and I up to work on the Nano. Skip forward to about two months ago, I was gearing up for MGC and was banging out build after build… that was when invited me to chill / build with him on his 24 hour build stream ( Gingers VOD) where I assembled a new, sexy black nylon GC Micro.Īt MGC, I was happily surprised to see just how much attention the GC Micro was getting. etc.) so I ended up scrapping it… Skip to around November of last year, and Wesk reached out to me about collaborating on the GC Nano (as mentioned in his post). Eager for the two of us to build our own GC Micro (as no one other than Wesk had built one at the time), I assembled two “kits,” and sent one out to Around the time that the two of us were building our units, Wesk had shown the two of us little teasers of an even smaller Gamecube-type build… Unfortunately for me, while SparkleBear’s Micro came together pretty nicely with minimal hiccups, I had lots of trouble with mine (video snow from the AVE-HDMI, I wasn’t happy with the print quality of the shell, etc. *Read CrazyGadgets Part 2 of this post below for additional build information, technical info, BOM and Gerbers.* For working with us to provide a fantastic showcase of the project. ![]() If you hadn't set the bar so high (or so small) initially we wouldn't have pushed as hard as we did. For your work on the custom GC boot animation allowing us to put the cherry-on-top of the system boot. A mad scientist and a genuine legend, thanks for all the PCB design assistance. ![]()
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