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Ningtendo PXBOX 5: Modder builds 3-in-1 console from Playstation, Xbox and Switch
by Martin Jud

For the 35th anniversary of the Super Nintendo, designer Gustavo Bonzanini combines the console with matching 90s fashion: a Nike Air Max 90 sneaker.
The Super Nintendo was launched on the Japanese market 35 years ago under the name Super Famicom (スーパーファミコン; Sūpā Famikon). Gustavo Bonzanini, a designer from Singapore, wanted to celebrate the anniversary in style and came up with the AIR SNES: a modified version of the Nike Air Max 90 sneaker. In Bonzanini's version, the iconic shoe from the 1990s is also a fully functioning games console.
The original Super Nintendo measures around 30 × 24 × 11 centimetres and weighs over two kilograms. It would never fit in a shoe. Bonzanini's solution: an emulation. For this, he used a Raspberry Pi Zero W. This has enough computing power for the 16-bit SNES games.

The microcomputer is actually small enough to fit in the tongue of the sneaker - including a battery for 30 minutes of playtime. However, Bonzanini believes that the Raspberry Pi's integrated mini-HDMI connection is not enough in 1990 and adds an analogue converter to the device. You can now connect the colourful cables to its iconic RCA plugs and connect the console to a compatible TV.
Bonzanini has also opted for a compact and practical version of the gamepad. You can use the sneaker with the original SNES gamepad, but then you are tied to another cable. The designer has therefore given the Raspberry Pi a small upgrade with an 8Bitdo Mod Kit. This allows a gamepad to be connected to the Raspberry Pi via Bluetooth.

Naturally, you now want to know where you can get the shoe. At least I really like it. I also prefer it to the recently presented Xbox Crocs, which not only look bad, but also have no technology built in. Unfortunately, the designer piece is a one-off. So far, there are no plans to mass-produce the stylish piece. Game over for the big dream - or the start of your next mod project?
Ever since I learned how to hold a pen, I've been doodling away in bright colours. Thanks to my iPad, digital art has also become part of my life. That's why I love testing tablets – from the graphic design range to the regular kind. When I feel the urge to express my creativity without lugging lots of equipment, I go for the latest smartphones and start snapping away.
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