Everdrive GBA Pro Review – GBA Everdrive with Save States

Flash carts allow gamers to play a variety of ROMs on old, retro hardware in an easy and convenient way. Ever since the 90’s, they have existed, but as time goes on, they’ve become more convenient and cheaper. The Everdrive GBA Pro is an upgrade to the Everdrive GBA Mini. It comes with a few innovative new features.…

Everdrive GB X3 Vs Everdrive GB X5 Vs Everdrive GB X7 Which Should you buy?

The Game Boy and Game Boy Color hold special memories for many of us. As well as being dedicated handhelds that were getting new releases for a significant part of the 90’s, they were also home to some great Mario, Pokémon, and Zelda games. Furthermore, in 2026, there is a flourishing Game Boy homebrew scene. Because of all this, there are many, many games that you can load up your flash cart with.…

N64 Everdrive X5 Review

The N64 was home to some groundbreaking games that set the standard for games in their genre. Zelda: Ocarina of Time and Super Mario 64 are two such titles. Those two games are probably the most influential games for 3D movement and level design of their generation. Arguably, the Playstation didn’t have as many great core titles as the N64, but it did have a great diversity of games available and had titles for every genre you could imagine.…

FX PAK Pro Everdrive Review

Flash carts are a good tool to use in order to play old, retro games. Some games have become very expensive and rare. It’s good for video game preservation that we can access ROMs to play rare games. Whole communities develop because of the love of retro games. One brand has grown to almost define flash carts.…

Everdrive GB X7 Review

The Game Boy and Game Boy Color are systems that live on in many of our memories but many people don’t know that new games are unofficially still being developed, and released for these systems. Infinity, Dragonborne, and Kudzu are just some of the ‘homebrew’ titles that are being professionally released, and are whole new worlds for gamers to explore on their 8-bit handhelds.…