If you’ve ever gotten frustrated trying to connect two or three consoles to your TV, wait until you hear about the guy who successfully connected 444 of them. Al-Nasser is a collector, but started ...
This post may contain links from our sponsors and affiliates, and Flywheel Publishing may receive compensation for actions taken through them. The title “best-selling video game console of all time” ...
It's impressive, considering I struggle to keep the 6 or so consoles I have all connected. Swapping them out is often easiest in the moment. Also, it looks like he's counting different models of the ...
In a world where playing classic games on consoles is usually left to emulators (and/or maybe an older console or two we have laying around), there's someone like Ibrahim Al-Nasser who can pull off ...
In the company’s predictions for the next fiscal year, available here, Nintendo revealed that the Nintendo Switch 2 console is expected to sell 15 million units during its launch period. Alongside the ...
Murillo Zerbinatto is a contributor from Brazil. He's an RPG enthusiast (with a focus on JRPGs) who has been around the world of games and content creation for more than five years now. He has a ...
Ibrahim Al-Nasser keeps an Excel spreadsheet that tells him which switcher to turn on to play a particular console. His favorite? Sega Genesis, no question. CNET editor Gael Fashingbauer Cooper, a ...
If you thought you had a great gaming collection, sit down... and be prepared to be blown away by Ibrahim Al-Nasser for connecting 444 gaming consoles to a single TV, earning the gamer a Guinness ...
The Guinness World Records has named PlayStation as the ‘best-selling home video game console on brand in history.’ This probably isn’t a surprise, considering Sony’s PS2 is the best-selling single ...
The Nintendo Switch is the longest-serving Nintendo console, with the company having never left this much time in between releasing one console and the next. The Nintendo Switch is now the company's ...
I want to see a picture of the back of the rack! How is everything routed? It's bad enough here, where the (old Panasonic plasma) TV connects with the Roku, PS3, Wii, VHS (with a ATSC converter box on ...