GD10 Retro Game Console TV HD Output Plug and Play Games Console Stick Consoles Preinstalled System 2 Controllers 64GB
$38.99
Available in stock
Description
Price: $38.99
(as of Jul 27, 2024 10:07:55 UTC – Details)
GD10 Retro Game Console TV HD Output Plug and Play Games Console Stick Consoles Preinstalled System 2 Controllers 64GB
Simple Professional System: Equipped with an optimized system with higher stability and effective running speed, which can provide an excellent gaming experience such as Save&Load, Favorite Folder, Search etc.
Two Wireless Controller: Come with 2 wireless controller and adapter, connecting stable and almost 0 latency , let you beat more bosses together without any wire trouble.
Perfect Gifts for Kids & Family: This gaming player box is a perfect companion to keep your children occupied and improve their hand-eye coordination. Also it can bring more fun to your family party, makes home sweet home.
Package List: 1xGD10 Game Stick, 1xExtension HD Cable, 2x Wireless Controller, 1xReceiver, 1xUSB Cable, 1xManual
Rob –
Fails to get past boot. Errors out and shows generic app screen after a while.
Build qualityThe plastic shell for the controller and HDMI stick is rather low quality and there are mold lines etc. but all in all it is OK and for use and sturdy enough for what it is. On the controolers, the cover on the controllers is flimsy and the on/off switch is very delicate.Batteries / chargingThe controllers take 2x AAA batteries and the HDMI stick needs to be supplied with USB power (a micro usb cable is included but no power adapter)Bad image = no gamesI’ve tried this product twice, both times I had the same error. The screen gets stuck on boot up (1st image) and displays an error about setting up user (2nd image). If you wait, nothing changes. After repowering once or twice you eventually start getting an “android” page (1st image). If I try to browse apps for anything to play the games, no apps are found/ installed — including the “empire storm” app originally displayed at boot.UseSo in short I can’t use this as it won’t boot properly and there are no apps available to play games.Final thoughts:I do not recommend.
Mark –
Cool idea
It is pretty cool and takes me back to video playing days. It was fairly easy to hook up and connect.Overall decent gaming but a little high on price point.I hope this review is helpful!
Neri alvarez –
Video juego ya no me funciona
Los controles ya no responden y apenas tengo un mes de uso
AmazonTony –
Recommend:to be careful trusting any high praise review by someone who hasn’t plugged this thing in!
My recommendation is to be careful trusting any “high praise” review written by someone who probably hasn’t even plugged this thing in!I got the EWDGOES “GD10 Retro Game Console TV HD Output Plug and Play Games Console Stick Consoles Preinstalled System 2 Controllers 64GB”.This is an HDMI Gamestick with a pre-installed, bootable 64GB MicroSD (aka TF) card. It might have over 20K games, as it claims. I don’t believe it is beneficial to have that many visible, scrollable, and browseable at once. They did make some effort to divide them up, mostly by their respective gaming consoles (emulated). It would have been much nicer to have 100-200 games from which to choose, based on their popularity during their respective eras. The remaining games could then be searched by an advanced search, or displayed by an advanced button, but whichever way it’s done would hide so much of the clutter that makes this game emulator nearly unusable.The controllers require two AAA batteries each. They did not bother to include batteries, even though the price at the time of this review is about $60. At that price, I would have expected either rechargeable controllers or, at LEAST they could have included four cheap alkaline AAA batteries so the product could be used right out of the box. The controllers aren’t very good anyway. They have a cheap feel and under-responsive buttons and joysticks, which may or may not all work. They connect to the Gamestick via included USB Bluetooth receiver which needs to be plugged in to the Gamestick’s USB-A port to work.An 4″ HDMI extension cable is included so you don’t have to plug the Gamestick directly into your TV’s HDMI port. First connect the extension cable then plug the Gamestick into that. Plug the USB Bluetooth receiver into the Gamestick. Another stupid thing about this kit that bothers me is that (out of the box) there is a cap to protect the HDMI connector on the Gamestick, however, once you remove the cap and connect the Gamestick, there is nowhere to store the cap, and no built-in way to keep it attached to the Gamestick. Therefore, although it has little use if you plan to keep the Gamestick hooked up until it dies, that cap is VERY LOSEABLE, but probably not worth an AirTag.A 12″ MicroUSB cable is included. This connects to the MicroUSB port on the Gamestick. Connect the USB-A plug on the other end to a USB power source. Apparently, sixty bucks doesn’t warrant an AC power adapter for USB, so if you’re lucky, you will have an available powered USB port on your TV. If not, you’ll probably need an electrical extension cord plugged into an outlet, then a SEPARATELY-PURCHASED USB charger permanently plugged into the extension cord, where you can plug in the MicroUSB cable that is connected to the Gamestick. There is no information on the power requirements for the Gamestick, so you’ll have to guess, will 500mA work? or 1000mA? do you need 2.4A? or even 3A? This is why I believe any product that requires a constant USB power source in order to operate, should include the power adapter with it, especially when you’re talking about $50 or more.The box is unimpressive cardboard box, but will be your most likely way of storing the controllers or transporting the kit. They really could have provided a case where you could safely store the controllers and hold the removed batteries for storage so they don’t explode, installed, and ruin the controllers. I did not have a “user manual” as the listing claims I should have, but getting everything connected was pretty intuitive. I’m very doubtful that the documentation would have included what is really needed anyway, which is instructions for navigating the OS/App installed on the device. Which buttons to use and how to change which buttons to use on the controller seems to be a crapshoot, since they have just loaded thousands of games on here, relying on the user to figure out how to play them on their own.Overall, I would be MUCH happier with 100-200 (or even maybe 10-20) games that I can find and play with straightforward controls, sturdy controllers that are responsive, not leaving me wonder if the control doesn’t work or I’m not using the correct one, rechargeable controllers, so I don’t have to worry about disposable batteries, or at least a set of starter batteries so I’m able to use this without making additional purchases, a MicroUSB power cord long enough to reach an electrical outlet from a TV, and a USB power adapter INCLUDED to plug it into. There is not much I like about this “kit”, but it doesn’t warrant only 1 star. I’m giving it 2 stars because some people will be able to find ways around all these issues and may quite possibly end up happy with it. I might give it 3 stars if I was able to read the Asian language that is in much of the system, so if you can (sorry, I don’t even know which is which), it will probably be more enjoyable for you.
Eihab –
Retro game console stick
The performance of the emulation is great and responsive with the provided controllers. However, the SD card is full and does not allow even for temporary saves to happen without the loss of data. Either the capacity of the SD card should be higher or some room is left for such files to be saved safely. Networking can only be achieved by connecting a USB hub to the single port and then have a WIFI USB dongle connected together with the controller’s USB dongle so I can download more themes or even manage the storage on local network share on the stick.
Rob –
Fun throwback gaming
This was really easy to install. Plugged it into an AVR HDMI port, plugged the USB power into AVR’s front USB port, and it started right up on TV.Being designed for so many different consoles and games makes it difficult to have one perfect controller, and this is no exception. Learning curve is a little high trying to figure out which couple buttons do what, with most doing nothing, and of course each games will use different buttons.Graphics for most games are poor, but that is simply because it is emulating what it looked like back in the day when these games were popular. Way too many games to test, but those we tested did work OK for 2 players in most cases, with the controller configuration being the biggest drawback. Some performed flawlessly. Others were clunky but worked. Gave up trying to get a couple working with 2 players.Overall, works good for what it is, with 1000’s of games to chose from.
Shahram Robotics –
Excellent
Everything worked great. Totally worth it. Thousands of games taking you back down memory lane. For those who might struggle to exit a game, only one of the controllers with the Mode LED in red can quit a game by pressing SELECT and PLAY buttons at the same time, if you do it on the other controller nothing happens, it just resets the game. Thumbs up and have fun.