Retro console modders iFixRetro recently undertook the thankless task of rehabbing an old, beat-up Virtual Boy and transforming it into a painless console they could sit on a shelf and play games on their TV with. Who doesnāt wish they could go back and play Virtual Boy Wario Land without burring their face in Nintendoās archaic VR headset?
āConsolizingā a Virtual Boy isnāt the easiest due to the 1995 hardwareās intricate display, but iFixRetroās elegant results were made possible thanks in part to a newly designed 3D printed case.
Consolized a Virtual Boy system with @Furrtek Virtual Tap board and servo emulator while using the Nintendo Multiout Port for RGB display and with @Marcus919 3D Printed case! You can now play the Virtual Boy on TV now. Much thanks to @apdwaldo6 for providing the printed case. pic.twitter.com/DQjxly9C4a
ā iFixRetro (@iFixRetro) January 26, 2020
In it the iFixRetro crew placed a motherboard from an original Virtual Boy headset along with a Virtual Tap board and servo emulator. Designed by console modder called Furrtek, the servo emulator effectivelytricks the Virtual Boy hardware into thinking itās running off of the original headset display while actually outputting to a TV. The Virtual Tap, meanwhile, gives you the option of outputting the Virtual Boy graphics in a larger ratio to better fit TVs.

The Virtual Boy is one of gamingās most notorious flops, but as a result of not selling well it also has a tiny library of games most people have never touched and were never ported. That includes Virtual Boy Wario Land but also Jack Bros., an action adventure spin-off of Atlusā Megami Tensei series, and Hudson Softās vertical-scrolling shooter Vertical Force None of these games were amazing but necessarily deserve to get chucked in the dustbin of history either.
And now at least thereās a solid solution for playing them without straining your neck and having your eyeballs bombarded with red lines at point-blank.