Project Unity was constructed by mad scientist or hardware hacker named Bacteria who unified 18 gaming consoles in one gamepad. This one-of-a-kind gamepad can play Sega Master System, GameCube, Dreamcast, NES, PS1 and more.

Aside from the impressive factor that 18 game consoles are actually working in it, Project Unity was also constructed with authentic hardware, which means no more need for emulators or combo units. The gaming device manages to use a singular power supply, video output and custom-built controller no matter what system you select.

Project Unity was made under three years and 3,500 hours of full time work, housing original circuit boards from 15 classic consoles powered by a single PSU and outputting via one SCART.

The cost of Project Unity is £700 or AU$1022, and the final product has around 30 metres of cables inside and weighs around 20 kilogrammes.

Here is the complete list of game console systems Project Unity can play:

  • Atari 7800
  • Sega Master System
  • Sega MegaDrive (Genesis)
  • Super Nintendo
  • Nintendo NES
  • Nintendo 64
  • NeoGeo MVS
  • Sega Saturn
  • Sega Dreamcast
  • Nintendo GameCube
  • NEC TurboGrafx X
  • Colecovision
  • Intellivision
  • Sony PlayStation 2
  • Amstrad GX1000
  • PlayStation 1 via PlayStation 2
  • Atari 2600 via Atari 7800
  • GBA via GameCube