Action Gamemaster

The Action Gamemaster was a vaporware product that would have been produced by Active Enterprises, a small manufacturer of unlicensed video games.
Active was marketing its first commercial release, the Action 52 multicart, for both the NES and Sega Genesis, with plans to produce a version for the Super NES. The company was also trying to sell its signature characters, the , as a line of toys, a television cartoon, and a series of video games. Despite the fact that Action 52 was met with a negative reaction from most in the industry, Active was undaunted, and announced at the 1994 Consumer Electronics Show (CES) its intentions to manufacture and produce the Action Gamemaster.
The Action Gamemaster, as planned, was to have been a portable game system in the sense of Nintendo's Game Boy and the Atari Lynx, but with much greater aspirations. It would have featured compatibility with NES, Genesis and Super NES cartridge games, as well as CD-ROM games, via adapters that would retail individually. This was in addition to games written exclusively for the Action Gamemaster. One such game, Cheetahmen III, was announced at the CES show, but neither it nor the Action Gamemaster were actually on display. Other features included a 3.2" color LCD screen, TV tuner, built-in battery charger, and a cigarette-lighter adapter for cars.
Existing concept art for the Action Gamemaster reveals a system shaped roughly like a flight yoke, with a directional pad on the left side, an action-button diamond on the right, unidentified function keys on the large central area, and the LCD screen on a bevel facing the player. The Action Gamemaster would have been much larger than other handheld systems of its day. Weight and power-requirement statistics are not available at this time.
Despite the CES announcement, it appears little to no work was actually done on the Action Gamemaster by the time Active ceased its video game operations in 1994. It is generally believed that the system, had it been realized, would have proven far too bulky and expensive to be practical (a projected retail price of around $500 USD was being suggested at the time).
"Action Gamemaster" was also an alternate title for ' game on the NES version of Action 52 as well as the name of a human character who appeared in the opening cinematic for that game and on the cover of Action 52, but does not appear in the game itself.
 
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