Quote from: Julia1996 on January 11, 2018, 08:42:23 PM
It looks like part of a surround sound set up. Is that it?
Okay so. Laser disc. Was super huge record sized CDs basically. Completely obliterated by DVD, and also because it was stupid. So along comes Pioneer, with an absolutely staggeringly brilliant idea:
Pioneer Executive 1: "Let's release a series of giant boxes that all hook together and get up to 2 feet tall with a bizarre combination of functionalities no one ever needed in one machine, and each module should cost several hundred dollars. Also, let's create our own proprietary video game console and include it as part of this."
Pioneer Executive 2: "And we will use laser disc as our medium!"
Pioneer Executive 1: "You, sir, have read my mind."
Pioneer Executive 2: "And also have giant proprietary karaoke albums on laser disc for four time the price of a regular album!"
Pioneer Executive 1: "You're stark raving mad, and I LOVE it."
Pioneer Executive 2: "And we'll only make about 1,000 of them for the entire country!"
Pioneer Executive 1: "I'm glad sexual harassment isn't a big deal yet, because I am about to make out with you so hard."
(4 hours of Pioneer executive sloppy make-out session later.)
... *Ahem*. Anywho. It is called the LaserActive. It was released piecemeal as individual modules that included multiple video game consoles (which, honestly was kind of cool), a CD player, a tape player, I'm pretty sure a VHS player, a karaoke machine, the proprietary LaserActive game console module (I think it was the main one you had to have maybe), etc. A local place actually had one that had about 4 of the better modules and was selling it for $1100, and to my knowledge never sold. The system... did not succeed.
In the picture I posted I think those are the two video game modules for the Sega Genesis and TurboGrafx 16. A great console that no one ever heard of, and was not exactly a strong selling point for the Laser Active even if cool for game nerds like myself.