3/22/2023 0 Comments Ilibrary genesis![]() ![]() Choose "Japanese" from the options menu for language, and the entire experience changes. What the Genesis Mini 2 shares with the TG-16 and original Mini is how the list of games changes to reflect the language settings. It was a very cool, very pointless, but loving touch that's completely missing from the Genesis Mini 2, and it's disappointing to me, a grown man who loves make-believe sounds. In other words, if you loaded a CD from the US interface, it resembled the US version of the TurboGrafx, whereas loading from the Japanese interface resembled the PC Engine, while EU games looked like the EU version of the PC Engine – it even simulated the sound of a CD drive spinning up and reading the disc. For instance, while the Genesis Mini 2 does include a healthy selection of Sega-CD games, it lacks the TurboGrafx-16 Mini's added touch – a custom, region-specific animation when you loaded up a cart or CD-ROM game. It’s a shame that Sega didn’t take some inspiration from the far superior UI delightfulness of the TurboGrafx-16 Mini. There's not much in the way of improvement from the first, and honestly, since I'm not too fond of the music, it's slightly less great. The menu screen music isn't nearly as good, but all the other options I liked have returned, like seeing your "collection" spines-out, as well as a few new wallpapers for the menu screens and during gameplay. The Genesis Mini 2’s UI is mostly unchanged from the original. The three-button controller that came with the original wasn't great, either, but at least there were two of them in the box instead of just one. I didn't notice any lack of responsiveness while playing, but it just feels light and cheap, almost like it was an afterthought. They have a mushiness I found really off-putting, and the D-pad shares the same tactile unpleasantness. The bad news is that the controller kind of sucks.Īs far as first-party replicas of old controllers go, the one that comes with the Genesis Mini 2 is just passable at best. ![]() The good news is the proper expanded controller is right there, included in the box, and will work with your original Genesis Mini, too. At first glance, it's just an ordinary six-button controller – something we were robbed of with the 2019 Genesis Mini. It's located where you might expect to find a right-shoulder button on another controller, but blended into the mold so it doesn't stick out. ![]() The menu button on the controller is easy to access and doesn't mess with the original design of the controller in the slightest. It’s nice that it’s a standard USB device, with a roughly 2-meter cord, so you can plug it into a PC if you want. A button with the same functionality is also built into the included six-button wired Genesis controller. In this case, even when you are searching in other languages, the results keep your preferred ones on top, so that you don't miss out.On the front of the Genesis Mini 2 is a power switch and a button labeled “reset,” but that’s not actually what it does: pushing it brings up a menu screen letting you save, load, or quit back to the main menu during games. The extension allows you to set your preferred languages and prioritize the results of those languages.įor example, if your preferred language is set to Chinese, English, the extension will show you all the Chinese books first, and English second, and then others. You can choose either to save it in a default directory, or to specify the directory every time, by configuring the extension. The extension allows you to quickly download the book file to your local machine with a single click. It then presents all the results with their book covers to help you quickly identify the desired book you are looking for. The extension sends query directly to the fastest mirror of Library Genesis. A Raycast extension that lets you search books on Library Genesis and allows you to quickly view them and directly download them. ![]()
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