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Game Boy Advance SP

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Game Boy Advance SP
A Cobalt Blue front-lit version of the Game Boy Advance SP
Also known asFrontlit: AGS-001
Backlit: AGS-101
ManufacturerNintendo
Product familyGame Boy[1]
TypeHandheld game console
GenerationSixth
Release date
Introductory price
  • US$99.99 (equivalent to $166 in 2023)
  • ¥12,500 (equivalent to ¥13,046 in 2019)
  • 129.99
  • CA$149.95 (equivalent to $229 in 2023)
  • A$199.99 (equivalent to $322 in 2022)
  • £89 (equivalent to £178 in 2023)
DiscontinuedYes; date undisclosed
Units shipped43.57 million[5]
MediaGame Boy Game Pak
Game Boy Color Game Pak
Game Boy Advance Game Pak
System on a chipNintendo CPU AGB
CPUARM7TDMI @ 16.78 MHz
Sharp SM83 @ 4 / 8 MHz
Memory288 KB RAM, 98 KB VRAM
DisplayFrontlit or backlit TFT LCD, 240 × 160 px, 40.8 mm × 61.2 mm (1.61 in × 2.41 in)[6]
Backward
compatibility
Game Boy
Game Boy Color
PredecessorGame Boy Color[7]
SuccessorNintendo DS
Related

The Game Boy Advance SP[a] (GBA SP), released in Japan on February 14, 2003,[8] is a foldable handheld game console developed, released, and marketed by Nintendo that served as an upgraded version of the original Game Boy Advance. The "SP" in the name stands for "Special".[9] It is the penultimate console in the Game Boy Advance product line before the Game Boy Micro, which was released in September 2005.

History

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The Game Boy Advance SP was championed by Satoru Okada, who led the development of the original Game Boy Advance. When Okada first pitched to Nintendo leadership the idea of a small and thin Game Boy Advance that used a rechargeable battery, the feedback was almost entirely negative. Not deterred, Okada told one of his hardware engineers to build a conceptual model as small and thin as possible without regard to the feasibility of manufacturing the device. What resulted was the clamshell design of the Game Boy Advance SP. When Okada took this conceptual model to the same leadership group that rejected his initial pitch, they were quickly won over.[10]

In addition to being smaller and using a rechargeable battery, the Game Boy Advance SP also addressed a key shortcoming of the original Game Boy Advance: the reflective color display that was hard to see in dark conditions.

The first Game Boy Advance SP had a frontlight that illuminated the front of the display and a reflective surface behind the screen that sent light back through the liquid crystal pixel elements to the viewer. A later revision replaced the frontlight and reflective surface with a backlight that also illuminated the liquid crystal pixel elements.

Hardware

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Technical specifications

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Game Boy Advance SP
(AGS-001)
Game Boy Advance SP
(AGS-101)
Height 84 mm (3.3 in) (closed), 155 mm (6.1 in) (open)
Width 82 mm (3.2 in)
Depth 24.4 mm (0.96 in)
Weight 142 g (5.0 oz)
Display 2.9-inch (diagonal) reflective thin-film transistor (TFT) color liquid-crystal display (LCD), 40.8 mm × 61.2 mm (1.61 in × 2.41 in) with frontlight 2.9-inch (diagonal) backlit TFT color LCD, 40.8 mm × 61.2 mm (1.61 in × 2.41 in)
Resolution 240 (w) × 160 (h) pixels (3:2 aspect ratio)
Frame rate 59.737 Hz[11]
Color support 32,768 colors, up to 511 simultaneously in character mode, all may displayed simultaneously in Bitmap mode
System on a chip (SoC) Nintendo CPU AGB
Processors
Memory
  • On SoC: 32 KB RAM, 98 KB Video RAM (includes 1 KB of object attribute memory and 1 KB of palette RAM)
  • Internal: 256 KB RAM
Battery Rechargeable lithium-ion pack provides 10 hours of use with light on and 18 hours with light off, 3-hour recharge time
Sound
  • Channels: Dual 8-bit DAC for stereo sound (called Direct Sound), plus all legacy channels from Game Boy. The DACs can be used to play back streams of wave data, or used to output multiple wave samples processed or mixed in software by the CPU.
  • Outputs: Built-in mono speaker
I/O
Controls
  • Eight-way control pad
  • Six action buttons (A, B, L, R, Start, Select)
  • Volume slider
  • Frontlight power button
  • Power switch
  • Eight-way control pad
  • Six action buttons (A, B, L, R, Start, Select)
  • Volume slider
  • Backlight brightness button
  • Power switch
References: [12][13][14][15][16]

Headphone jack

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Nintendo-official headphone adapter for Game Boy Advance SP

Nintendo removed the 3.5 mm headphone jack from the SP, which had been included on all previous Game Boy models. Headphones designed specifically for the GBA SP can be purchased, or standard headphones can be attached with an optional adapter that plugs into the same port as the AC adapter.[17] As both the AC adapter and headphones use the same port, it is not possible to charge the SP and listen to headphones at the same time with the Nintendo-brand adapter. There are, however, third-party adapters that "split" into two different cords: the power jack on one side and a headphone jack on the other.

Backlit model (AGS-101)

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The pearl blue AGS-101 GBA SP model that featured an improved backlit screen[18]

In 2005, Nintendo released an improved version of the Game Boy Advance SP in North America, featuring a brighter backlit screen instead of the previous version's frontlit screen. This GBA SP was Nintendo's first internationally-released handheld system to feature an integrated backlight. (However, there had already been a backlit system years earlier with the Japan-only Game Boy Light, which was essentially a Game Boy Pocket with an electroluminescent backlit display.) The AGS-101 was never officially released in Japan, however, and the frontlit AGS-001 models were still available on the market until the end of production.

The new model can be distinguished by the following features:

  • The box states "Now with a BRIGHTER backlit screen!" to distinguish the new model from the older, frontlit models.
  • The model number of the backlit SP is AGS-101, whereas the model number of the original frontlit SP is AGS-001. This can be found on the label at the bottom of the unit.[19]
  • The mini button at the top center of the console's lower face is now referred to in the manual as the "Brightness Switch" and selects between two levels of brightness, "Normal" (Low) and "Bright" (High) with no off setting. On the frontlit models this button turned the frontlight on or off only. With the backlight set to "Normal" (Low) the brightness still surpasses the original AGS-001 with the frontlight on.
  • When powered off, the backlit model's screen is completely black, but the frontlit model's screen is noticeably lighter.

The North American backlit version comes in three standard colors: "Pearl Blue", "Pearl Pink" and "Graphite" (a greyer version of Onyx Black). There were also two Toys "R" Us exclusive backlit models; a "SpongeBob SquarePants" model[20] and a "Limited Edition Pikachu" model.

In 2006, the AGS-101 backlit model also saw a very limited release in Europe.[21] Few models made it to market, likely due to the release of the Game Boy Advance-compatible Nintendo DS one year prior. The European version was released in "Surf Blue"[22] as well as re-issued in "Pink" and "Tribal" editions.

Unlike the North American release, the European box does not feature any prominent text to distinguish the backlit models from the older frontlit models. In addition, only the "Surf Blue" color was unique to the AGS-101, the other two colors "Pink" and "Tribal" had already been released as frontlit models – for these reasons it can be very difficult to identify a European backlit SP. Apart from the AGS-101 model number on the base of the unit, the only other obvious distinguishing feature of the European backlit model is the large picture of the Game Boy Advance SP featured on the front of the box. (The European frontlit models of "Pink" and "Tribal" only feature small pictures of the Game Boy Advance SP on the sides of the box and Flower/Tattoo patterns on the front respectively.)

The AGS-101 Game Boy Advance SP was the final Nintendo handheld to have backward compatibility with Game Boy and Game Boy Color games in North America and Europe.

Unit colors

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The GBA SP launched in Platinum Silver and Cobalt Blue, with the addition of Onyx in Europe and Japan.[3] Later colors include: Flame Red, Pearl Pink, Pearl Blue, Graphite, Midnight Blue, Charizard Fire Red, Torchic Orange, Venusaur Leaf Green, Groudon Red, Kyogre Blue, Rayquaza Green, NES classic design, and Pikachu Yellow. A limited gold edition with a Triforce and the Hyrule Royal Family crest was available in Europe which included a copy of The Legend of Zelda: The Minish Cap.[23] In 2003, Toys "R" Us sold an exclusive gold edition (without any Zelda symbols) in the US starting on Black Friday of that year, initially with a Super Mario Advance 4 game.[24]

In Japan, it was released in a variety of standard colors and special packages. In most other regions it was released in Platinum Silver and Charcoal Black. Later, a Flame Red version was released. Six special editions have also been released: an NES Classics model with the same color scheme as a classic NES controller (and designed to resemble an NES deck when closed), a SpongeBob SquarePants model, a Pikachu model, and a silver model with a tattoo design printed on it, known as the 'Tribal Edition'.[25] In other regions, such as Europe, Asia, and the Middle East, additional colors have been released, such as Pearl Green and Starlight Gold.[26]

The Game Boy Advance SP had other limited editions:

  • All Blacks (New Zealand only)
  • Deep Silver (Kingdom Hearts: Chain of Memories Edition)
  • Green & Orange (Limited Edition)
  • Mario
  • Pearl Blue
  • Pearl Green
  • Pearl White (Limited Edition)
  • Snow White
  • Spice & Lime
  • Surf Blue (UK only)
  • Tribal
  • White Rip Curl special edition (Australia only)
  • "Who Are You?" (Black with "Who Are You?" printed on the top)

Reception

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M. Wiley of IGN called the Game Boy Advance SP "a step in the right direction for Nintendo", praising the system's new redesign over the original GBA and highlighting its inclusion of a backlit screen and rechargeable battery, although minor criticism went towards the system's omission of a headphone jack.[27] Engadget gave it a global score of 84 out of 100, also praising the new features of the redesign while noting the system's lack of a headphone jack.[28] Lawson Wong of Fresh Gear called it "darn close to perfection" aside from the missing headphone jack.[29] Matthew D. Sarrel of PC Magazine suggested it to consumers as an improvement over the original model, praising the backlight and integration of a charger as well as improved visual quality, though he noted that players with larger hands may find difficulty with the system's design.[30]

Sales

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As of June 30, 2009, the Game Boy Advance series has sold 81.48 million units worldwide, of which 43.52 million are Game Boy Advance SP units.[31]

Life-to-date Number of units sold
Date Japan Americas Other Total
2003-03-31[32] 0.82 million 0.83 million 0.46 million 2.10 million
2003-06-30 ? ? ? 4.84 million[33]
2003-09-30[34] 2.33 million 4.32 million 2.38 million 9.04 million
2003-12-31[35] 3.14 million 7.82 million 4.34 million 15.30 million
2004-03-31[36] 3.68 million 8.78 million 4.70 million 17.16 million
2004-06-30 ? ? ? 19.33 million[37]
2004-09-30[38] 5.02 million 12.46 million 6.21 million 23.68 million
2004-12-31[39] 5.94 million 16.13 million 8.67 million 30.73 million
2005-03-31[40] 6.00 million 16.69 million 9.10 million 31.79 million
2005-06-30 ? ? ?
2005-09-30[41] 6.16 million 18.08 million 10.08 million 34.32 million
2005-12-31[42] 6.35 million 20.40 million 10.64 million 37.40 million
2006-03-31[43] 6.42 million 20.95 million 10.86 million 38.23 million
2006-06-30[44] 6.46 million 21.30 million 11.08 million 38.84 million
2006-09-30[45] 6.48 million 21.95 million 11.37 million 39.79 million
2006-12-31[46] 6.50 million 23.06 million 11.78 million 41.33 million
2007-03-31[47] 6.50 million 23.47 million 11.95 million 41.92 million
2007-06-30[48] 6.50 million 23.78 million 12.14 million 42.43 million
2007-09-30[49] 6.51 million 24.01 million 12.31 million 42.82 million
2007-12-31[50] 6.51 million 24.01 million 12.51 million 43.02 million
2008-03-31[51] 6.51 million 24.00 million 12.71 million 43.23 million
2008-06-30[52] 6.51 million 24.00 million 12.89 million 43.41 million
2008-09-30[53] 6.51 million 24.00 million 12.97 million 43.49 million
2008-12-31[54] 6.51 million 24.00 million 13.00 million 43.52 million

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ ゲームボーイアドバンスSP (Japanese: Gēmu Bōi Adobansu SP)
  2. ^ 4.194304 MHz for Game Boy backward compatibility, 8.388608 MHz for Game Boy Color backward compatibility.

References

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  1. ^ Ishihara; Morimoto. "Pokémon HeartGold Version & Pokémon SoulSilver Version". Iwata Asks (Interview: Transcript). Interviewed by Satoru Iwata. Nintendo. Archived from the original on November 24, 2022. Retrieved September 25, 2022.
  2. ^ "Nintendo Game Boy Advance SP review". CNET. Archived from the original on November 2, 2012. Retrieved January 22, 2013.
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