My PS3 just 'died' or rather it's Blu-Ray laser did. When I feel like it, I'll probably drop the 40 bucks for a new laser and swap it.
Good old trusty PS2 fatty. Shame the controllers aren't as durable, I've broken at least 4 of themIdlemessiah said:Yet my 10+ year old PS2 is still chugging away like the day it came out of the box.
I almost never tighten the screws on one of the panels on my computer anymore, because sliding it to the side and getting rid of dust seems to be the best way to make things workMorsomk said:My original PS2 stopped playing disks because of the dust overload that went into its fan. Learned a valuable lesson that day, always(or regularly) clean the fans of your consoles and computers.
i broke three gameboys, a psone, psp and several controllersMisterian said:Okay, throughout my life of playing games, I've had 2 game consoles die on me.
First was my Nintendo Gamecube, things were going just fine with it until afew years later when it wouldn't play a single game for longer than around 45 seconds, after that, it freezes completely. fortunately, my dad called Nintendo and they delivered a replacement Gamecube for $50.
Second, just afew days ago, my Xbox 360 pulled a d***-move extrodinaire and refused to play any of my games, it would just go on it's reading stage for what meant like an entire minute before acting like I placed nothing in it. Now I have to wait 'till my dad can afford to help me get it repaired.
Has anyone else here faced their game consoles being broken?
That sounds like the battery in the cartridges have died, which prevents it from saving to them. You can fix that by opening the cartridges and swapping out the battery, there are a bunch of guides on google. I had the same thing with my SNES, and that fix worked like a charm.Johnny Novgorod said:The only broken "console" I have is my Gameboy Color, which has gone senile and as I mentioned elsewhere won't read my cartridges anymore (or rather, create save files).