VCOM also features Upin & Ipin branded versions of the system, with them claiming to have license for the series.Ī later model, the PVP 2, is a Mega Drive/Sega Genesis clone.
some examples include characters from video games like Mario, Sonic, Pikachu, Angry Birds, etc to some anime characters like Goku and Naruto to various cartoon characters like Boboiboy, Mickey Mouse, Masha, to some movie characters like Mr Peabody and Sherman, Minions and the Avengers.
Several Indonesian versions have popular characters from many series on the boxes and the system. Quality can also vary between models, with several featuring problems such as incorrect screen sizes (leading to the graphics looking squashed or stretched), charger malfunctions (which worsen over time, which is why many PVPs rarely last longer than one year) and some cartridges can be tilted just right to reveal a menu from a different cartridge (this was only known to work on one model) Even systems that share the same name and box art can have a different game list, or potentially be based on an entirely different console platform. Many different models of the PVP exist, and they are somewhat hard to distinguish from each other. It has a rechargeable battery and, depending on the unit, uses either a Game Boy Advance SP charger or a USB charger. If a cartridge containing the necessary pins is put inside, another list can potentially run.
PVP carts only trigger a switch for their original console, similar to the N-Joypad, and when they are placed in other revisions they will not run the intended menu however, some models intentionally do not include a cartridge they are capable of running, so they can be re-branded as different units later. The console was an NES clone with built-in games, some of which were contained on a proprietary cartridge (which was designed to resemble a Game Boy Advance game). The first revision of the PVP was released around 2011.