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Why Do Retro Games Look Bad on Modern TVs? HDMI Adapters, Upscalers, Cables, and Input Lag Explained
Retro consoles were built for CRT televisions, not modern HDTVs and 4K displays. This guide explains why old systems like the NES, SNES, N64, GameCube, Wii, Genesis, Saturn, Dreamcast, PS1, PS2, Original Xbox, PSP, and TurboGrafx-16 can look blurry, stretched, laggy, or muddy on modern TVs. Learn how RF, composite, S-Video, component, HDMI adapters, Hyperkin HD cables, AV to HDMI converters, upscalers, and input lag all affect the picture.

How to Spot Fake Retro Games Before You Buy: Pokémon, GBA, DS, SNES, N64, and More
Fake retro games are getting harder to spot, especially for popular titles like Pokémon, EarthBound, Chrono Trigger, Conker’s Bad Fur Day, Fire Emblem, and other collectible cartridge games. This guide explains how to check labels, shells, screws, codes, boards, listings, boxes, manuals, and marketplace red flags before you buy. It also explains how Power Up Gaming protects customers by carefully inspecting used games and keeping fake games in-store as reference examples.

Region Locking Explained: Which Retro Games and Consoles Work in Canada?
Buying imported retro games can be confusing, especially when terms like NTSC, PAL, NTSC-J, Region 1, and Americas region start showing up. This guide explains which retro games and consoles work in Canada, which systems are region-free, which ones are region-locked, and what Canadian collectors need to watch for before buying Japanese, European, or other imported games.


























