To celebrate its 60th birthday, Sega got up to all kinds of fun stuff – and that included the release of new hardware. Alongside the Astro City Mini console, the company also miniaturised its Game Boy rival, the Game Gear, releasing it in four colour variants which each came pre-loaded with different games.
When we went hands-on with the Game Gear Micro, we came away somewhat puzzled; not only is this device seemingly exclusive to Japan (there's been no indication of a western release since we initially covered it), it's so tiny it's hardly practical for prolonged play, and the decision to include different games on each model means you have to shell out hundreds of dollars to get the full library.
However, in addition to the four initial colours – black, yellow, blue and red – Sega has also released a fifth variant, which comes in white and ships with the same games found on the recently-released Aleste Collection for Nintendo Switch. We recently reviewed this collection, giving it a glowing 8/10 score.
The limited-edition package contains a physical copy of the game on Switch, the Game Gear Micro, a 'Big Window' accessory (which makes the screen somewhat easier to see) and a couple of art books. The version we got also came with a bonus "History of Aleste" book (in Japanese, naturally).
While the seemingly random selection of games seen on the other Game Gear Micros made it hard to find a variant which ticked all of your personal boxes, the games included here (Aleste/Power Strike, Power Strike II, GG Aleste, GG Aleste 2 and GG Aleste 3) are all excellent, although it goes without saying that they're all shmups so if you're not a fan of the genre, it's not going to be particularly appealing to you.
It's also worth stating that the same issues we had with the other Game Gear Micro models apply to this one; the controls are useable but playing for a long time is painful, and the screen isn't ideal for fast-paced shooters with lots of small bullets moving around the screen at high speed. The Big Window does make things a little easier, of course.
The biggest catch with this particular model is the price. Retailers are selling it for around $350 now, and thanks to the highly limited nature of the release, you can expect its value to rise over time (Play Asia, where we sourced our copy, has already sold out of the Switch version, but the PS4 edition is still up for grabs). Is it really worth it, when Aleste Collection on Switch offers a superior experience in practically every regard? Probably not, but it's easily the Game Gear Micro model we've spent the most time with.
This article was originally published by nintendolife.com on Tue 12th January, 2021.
Comments 15
The blue one with sonic and gun star heroes is the best one, especially if you don’t speak Japanese. This one is only high rated because it’s limited.
What is this? A console for ants. It has to be at least.....3 times bigger than this!
I don't desire this at all. Can't stand the Game Gear. (Master System is my least favourite console ever)
However, if I did love the Game Gear, like I loved Gameboy or something, then I would no doubt be wanting all the Game Gear Micros haha.
Are these ever coming to the UK?! I need them all. Take my money!!!
Got a spare $350?
Lol no, and even if I had, I'd spend more wisely. Why is it that recent gaming products (hardware and software alike) seem kind of undesirable (maybe disgusting) to me? This is including those red-blue Switches Nintendo came up with. The last good thing I bought was Hades and now I can't be bothered.
No nostalgia for game gear, gameboy was the thing that introduced me to nintendo though and would instabuy a gameboy re-release
I even really like my smb edition game and watch even tho I have no nostalgia or memories of the g&w it's a nice device and actually very playable (doubt that tiny tiny game gear sega gave us is playable)
Honestly sega should of just made a cheap keyring with how small they made it
Oh and as for that white game gear, yes I'd be interested.. if it was sold locally and was like £30-£40 and not $350 lol
These are silly. Far too small and limited. They are gimmicks meant to prey on nostalgic collectors, not playable retro consoles.
Game Gear... I remember my brother traded our NES for a Game Gear. I hate Game Gear.
What an awesome tiny little Game Gear with the best GG shoot em ups all loaded up on it! I'd love to have one of those things, but won't fork over the cash for it. Just got the Aleste Collection and it is absolutely awesome. Worth the $73 or so I paid for it, even though that is ridiculous and will keep too many people from enjoying such an awesome collection of perfect shoot em ups with amazingly great music.
@Strictlystyles I don't know how much Gunstar GG sells for, but I can imagine this is a rather pricey collection of games desirable to the right audience.
(and I mean, as desirable as a microscopic Game Gear can be I get this micro is made to Japanese tastes but I still think Sega is missing an opportunity by not also building a version of the GG Mini to western tastes.)
I like the idea of a small handheld as like a keychain accessory. But the Game Gear minis are lacking in the amount of games for what you pay. I'd rather get something like the FunKey S.
Is there such thing as a desirable Game Gear Micro?
I take ***** bigger than this thing, and my ***** have more diversity
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