

The price tag is similarly impressive for a GBA flash cart in the modern era (still less than many would have paid in the GBA era itself) and many places charge around $100 USD/70 Euros, if not more by the time shipping and handling are taken care of. A GBA flash cart no longer needing a Windows program or custom piece of hardware is nothing special today, and naturally the Omega Definitive edition needs only something that can write to the microSD card. The Omega, and now the definitive edition thereof, sports a pretty impressive list of features that not all other flash carts will have and also support some things that the lesser carts might need patches for.

Most GBA flash carts can run just about anything that fits on the cart itself and it is likely only save related issues that will get in the way, the few hardware related issues tending to have patches. However it seems there was more that could be done and thus we are here today with a sequel. They came back with a brand new design the other year in the EZFlash Omega ( GBAtemp review), aiming to be the be and end all of GBA flash carts. EZFlash were among the top makers of GBA flash carts during the GBA era and have been making them (as well as flash carts for the DS and more recently original gameboy) ever since. A full review is coming later but for now a first impressions.įor those unfamiliar then the EZFlash Omega Definitive edition is EZFlash's latest GBA flash cart. EZFlash sent GBAtemp a sample of their new EZFlash Omega Definitive edition to test.
