Even if the patent expired, I understand that any company would still have to contend with copyright laws on the BIOS and games. Of course we all know about that.
Back to the topic at hand, researching this firethingie, I'm further convinced this isn't exactly what it appears to be. Box art from last year don't show any SEGA logo at all.
Seriously, if they're legitimate, there's virtually no information put out from them. Really, Game Doctor had a lot more information available in the 90's.
If this thing is indeed licensed (judging by the press release I would say it is), I gotta find me one.
I'm pretty sure I have seen a few joysticks with Sonic in them.
This unit probably isn't all that necessary, IMO. The Genesis was a tank. I've seen them pulled from basement floods covered in sewage, run through a dishwasher, and the thing still works. Seen dudes get ticked and throw them down the stairs and they still work. I have very rarely seen one with a worn out connector. Add the fact that there is a physical config of the Genesis for every desire it's easy to find a working Genesis for every spot without spending much cash. They come big with and without stereo (Gen 1), medium with and without s vid (Gen 2), mini (Gen 3), integrated with the CD (CDX), a hot swappable module in a laserdisc player (LaserActive), a handheld (Nomad)...
Ha, crap. I must've bought the one bad Genesis. Its a second generation that has a graphical issue deeper than a dirty connector...
Same here. I have a 1st run Gen1 console with a really bad GPU. Used to work fine until the system warmed up and I got graphic glitches up the ass. Played the console on ice until one day the GPU just up and died. I only had it four weeks. Called the shop and instead of taking it as a return, they just sent me a newer Gen1 console.
Still got that old Gen too. Took it apart to see how it worked and it's still in a box. Found it after three moves and amazingly it's still all in one piece except I lost the little baggie with the screws. Oh well.