MrJBRPG wrote: ↑November 3rd, 2019, 2:14 pm
the problem is that no other country besides Japan has experience with the JVS IO boards.
That's not true. Arcade operators are very familiar with this.
JVS has been well known since the late 90s. Tekken 3 came out it 1997 and that was already JVS compliant.
Unless you run a Raw Thrills exclusive arcade, I don't think JVS will come as a surprise to anyone.
I guess that must have been me looking things up about JAMMA compatible input pins for PC / MAME and was not familiar as much with JVS being talked about for arcade businesses in my area.
However, I am excited for how more frequent 4 player JVS compliant games will blossom under Exa Arcadia. Heck, even 8 player games can be a strong possibility.
And also, beside Japanese being the officially documented for JVS, plenty of dedicated arcade fans manage to translate that into other languages as well. That was from my internet investigation alone.
More specifically, I was surprised that there are not a lot of arcade machines with JVS IO boards in the arcades beyond Japan, but I do understand that has been subject of interest to the arcade home hobbyists so far, along with some operators that do have them. That quote from Arcade Heroes is what sparked my initial thoughts before being corrected by such fellows:
Arcade Heroes wrote:
It’s also important to note that if you plan on picking one of these kits up, that you install them into a proper cabinet. They have been designed for JVS cabinets (think NAOMI), and thus work great with most Japanese “candy cabs.” That is one challenge here in the US, which doesn’t have a lot of those around, so if you plan on getting a kit, you need to make absolutely sure that the monitor in your cab has low input lag.
Anyways, I have strong hopes that Exa Arcadia will skyrocket demand for 4 player native JVS IO boards, much like the Capcom Naomi IO board. https://www.solvalou.com/arcade/naomi
That quote doesn't make any sense whatsoever. I'm no EXA expert but from what i've read they work on anything JVS with at least 31k video. So they probably meant something along these lines.
It’s also important to note that if you plan on picking one of these kits up, that you install them into a proper cabinet. They have been designed for JVS cabinets (think NAOMI), and thus work great with most Japanese “candy cabs JVS "candy cabinets" that have 31khz monitors. That is one challenge here in the US, which doesn’t have a lot of those around, so if you plan on getting a kit, you need to make absolutely sure that the monitor in your cab has low input lag the cabinet has a proper JVS IO board installed and has at least 31khz video support.
No offense but you probably shouldn't write lengthy epistels or questions about things you know nothing about.
turntablism wrote: ↑November 3rd, 2019, 4:05 pm
Shou, do you know if i can plug and play the exa in a konami pc based cab (winning eleven / otomedius) ?
Do you know the monitor specification of them ?
I do not believe they are JVS so they are not compatible.
battlesmurf wrote: ↑November 2nd, 2019, 8:50 pm
What are the chances that the Aka & Blue stuff sells out and is going to be hard to find? I.e.- do I have time to think about it and wait- or are we going to be assed out like some of those cave kits nowadays?
From what we have seen, next 6 months the demand is high and supply is low.
If we do not meet a minimum amount of preorders for the next lot of Aka & Blue, there won't be anymore.
Games like Vritra and Rival Megagun are getting overhauled at the moment, when they debut, there will be a clear difference between previous versions and the arcade only version.
Ikaru wrote: ↑November 2nd, 2019, 2:50 pm
Any chance for buy an exa with games when I will come directly in Japan please? Thx
I calculated the customs fees .....a little too much with the 20 pour-cent more
Price in Japan is 550,000 JPY or so which is set by the distributors not us. Likely no available stock in Japan until next year.
@Shou
What will be the delivery date if I decide to order an exa + Aka kit TODAY?
More specifically, I was surprised that there are not a lot of arcade machines with JVS IO boards in the arcades beyond Japan, but I do understand that has been subject of interest to the arcade home hobbyists so far, along with some operators that do have them. That quote from Arcade Heroes is what sparked my initial thoughts before being corrected by such fellows:
Arcade Heroes wrote:
It’s also important to note that if you plan on picking one of these kits up, that you install them into a proper cabinet. They have been designed for JVS cabinets (think NAOMI), and thus work great with most Japanese “candy cabs.” That is one challenge here in the US, which doesn’t have a lot of those around, so if you plan on getting a kit, you need to make absolutely sure that the monitor in your cab has low input lag.
Anyways, I have strong hopes that Exa Arcadia will skyrocket demand for 4 player native JVS IO boards, much like the Capcom Naomi IO board. https://www.solvalou.com/arcade/naomi
JVS cabinets are absolutely way more common than you're thinking they are. It's used in a lot more than just candy cabinets too.
Pretty sure they are 15/24khz, with the Cyberlead II being a tri-sync. Might be wrong, it's been a while.
@MrJBRPG - JVS cabs and/or I/O converters are not in any way rare outside of Japan.. certainly less common than what you'd see in a modern large Japanese Game Center, but this is hardly an obstacle for even a new operator if they want to run these boards on location outside of Japan. The more important issue is requiring a 31khz display, as it's likely that many ops outside of Japan only have 15khz displays on their lever-based cabs, since they're mostly JAMMA. Outside of Arcades that specialize in or have modern fighters, you don't see too many 31khz displays that aren't deluxe machines (e.g. racing, shooting).