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Ms Pacman Commodore 64 Cartridges (like new)
Thanks to recompute33 for your donation.
Today i picked up a MS Pacman cartridges for Commodore 64 (Like new).
Commodore 64 in original Box / User manual / Powersupply

Autopsy:
Today i picked up a Commodore 64 in original box, it is in perfect condition with no damage at all including the Manual and original Powersupply.
source: wikipedia
Vixen switchable 16k Ram for Commodore VIC-20

Autopsy:
A third party switchable cartridge with up to 16k of extra RAM memory. Switchable to 3k, 8k or 16k.
Milton Bradley (MB) Super Simon

Autopsy:
from Wikipedia:
Simon is an electronic game of memory skill invented by Ralph H. Baer and Howard J. Morrison, with the software programming being done by Lenny Cope and manufactured and distributed by Milton Bradley.
Simon was launched in 1978 at Studio 54 in New York City and became an immediate success. It became a pop culture symbol of the 1980s.
source: wikipedia
Philips Videopac G7000 (1st gen) for Spare Parts
Philips Videopac G7000 (1st generation) with Powersupply Inside used for Spare Parts because missing some pieces.
source: videopac faq
VTech Laser 110

Autopsy:
from old-computers.com homepage:
The Laser 100/110 was the first model of the Laser 100/200/300 family. The ROM was nearly identical to the one of the Tandy Radio-Shack TRS-80 Color Computer, with only minor changes. It’s so close that when people write Laser emulators, they use TRS-80 CoCo ROM documentations (Laser detailed documentations are hard to find, especially about the ROM itslef).
The Basic was a Microsoft Basic just slightly modified to avoid lawsuits, some statements being stored in the ROM but not available on the machine! Like the most of the Vtech products, the Laser 100/110 was “cheaply” conceived: chicklet keyboard, plastic case, light-weight… It was produced to compete against the first wave of micro-computers like the famous Sinclair ZX-81.
The difference between the Laser 100 and the Laser 110 must be the RAM size (like the Laser 200 and 210), though very little information on the Laser 100 is available. The biggest difference with its big brother the Laser 200 was that it only had a black & white display. An obscure VZ-100 version was also released but this wasn’t the same machine as the VZ series sold in Australia and New-Zealand by Dick Smith Electronics.
source: old-computers.com
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