Alternative title: Teardown of a bootleg SNES cartridge I received (I got scammed by Aladdin)
He told the genie that he wished to have his game physically, didn't like how it came, then chucked it to me to tear apart and laugh. Joking aside, I received a bootleg copy of "Aladdin" which wasn't original as advertised, even though the eBay listing said so. At least, for one, it plays just fine, and hasn't fried my SNES, unlike the later bootlegs that use a glob top and 3V flash chips. A hot take, but I prefer the European version over what Capcom made for elsewhere; better graphics and presentation; at least the music isn't as cheesy, like Capcom's sound engine for all of their titles.
And, if you're curious as to what the PCB looks like with close-ups, then here they are, so you can reverse image search as to what type of board they're based off―Google's image search can't find anything.
(left: 16-pin CIC clone (no markings); middle: two mask ROMs (JY43x); right: 74LS139B by ST Electronics (demultiplexer).)
He told the genie that he wished to have his game physically, didn't like how it came, then chucked it to me to tear apart and laugh. Joking aside, I received a bootleg copy of "Aladdin" which wasn't original as advertised, even though the eBay listing said so. At least, for one, it plays just fine, and hasn't fried my SNES, unlike the later bootlegs that use a glob top and 3V flash chips. A hot take, but I prefer the European version over what Capcom made for elsewhere; better graphics and presentation; at least the music isn't as cheesy, like Capcom's sound engine for all of their titles.
And, if you're curious as to what the PCB looks like with close-ups, then here they are, so you can reverse image search as to what type of board they're based off―Google's image search can't find anything.
(left: 16-pin CIC clone (no markings); middle: two mask ROMs (JY43x); right: 74LS139B by ST Electronics (demultiplexer).)