A version of this post originally appeared on Tedium, a twice-weekly newsletter that hunts for the end of the long tail.

But before there were clones, there were cheap knockoffs. And the target of some of the most obvious cheap knockoffs was the Game Boy—a device that, despite its lack of color screen, captured the imagination of millions of 8-year-olds back in the early '90s. No wonder a bunch of other companies wanted in.

Let's talk about the rise of wannabe Game Boys. Taking a swing at the king was never so futile.

The subtle difference between a knockoff and a competitor

Before I get going here, I think it's important to make a bit of a delineation. The Sega Game Gear, the Atari Lynx, and the NEC TurboExpress were competitors to the Nintendo Game Boy. (You could even make the case for Tiger Electronics' horrible consoles, honestly.) They each had their own creative processes that led to their release, and each was distinctive in the market. (Especially the Lynx, based on the Marlboro-branded version of the device I stumbled upon when writing this story.)

However, a knockoff is clearly trying to confuse the market into thinking it's something more popular, often using off-the-shelf parts, while cutting corners on the design of the product. Basically, it's a product that succeeds because an unobservant parent or loved one doesn't know the difference.

This is a phenomenon that's well-known in video games, and one that continues to this day—the hard-to-find NES Classic, for example, has been a common target of knockoffs and direct even clones.

The Game Boy, in particular, attracted some interesting knockoffs, in part because its design was so simple and therefore easy to copy. That also meant that the companies taking aim at Nintendo's market share were much smaller no-name operations in most cases. And the devices, as a result, have become exceedingly obscure.

Case in point: I feel like I know my retro games pretty well, but I had completely forgotten about the Watara Supervision until recently.

Wait, what the heck is the Watara Supervision?

The obscure console that tried (and failed) to be a slightly better Game Boy

In a lot of ways, Watara's SuperVision was Hong Kong's attempt to show that it was no slouch on the video game front.

The SuperVision, which came out in 1992 under various names globally (notably QuickShot, a well-known maker of third-party game controllers during the era), attempted a modest improvement on the Game Boy at a time when most of its big-name competitors were aiming to jump leaps and bounds beyond the portable market leader.

Rather than having a color screen, it had a slightly larger one. The buttons were just a little bigger, and the sound was slightly better, too. And on its most-common model, it had a bendable body, which allowed players to arch their necks just a little bit less, as well as legs to hold up the screen if so desired. (This was it its best-known variant, one of 11 that were created worldwide, according to a 2001 FAQ on the long-dormant system. Some of the variants had a distinctive look, while others were designed to look almost exactly like a Game Boy.)

It even had an apparent trump card, in that it could be hooked up to a TV set, and with a forthcoming add-on, would eventually support full-color games—though that add-on was never released. In retrospect, this seems less impressive, but this was in the days before the Super Game Boy.

Clearly, these are evolutionary improvements at a time when every other competitor tried (and failed) to beat Nintendo with significantly better technology. The consoles, in practice, were so similar that the SuperVision actually worked with the Game Boy's AC adapter! (And in some variations, it was even more obviously a Game Boy knockoff.)

But that doesn't mean it worked out for Watara.

Of course, the biggest difference was price—the system could be had for just $49.95, with games available at price points between $8.95 and $14.95. On the game price front especially, this significantly undercut Nintendo.

Watara had a lot to prove. As writer Ed Dille noted in a 1993 issue of Electronic Games, the Hong Kong market had a reputation for piracy it had to shake, and despite efforts to try a more legit approach giving the console "a slight technological edge," the games left something to be desired.

"Weighing all of the factors presented thus far, the overriding consideration seems to be that it is still possible to be disappointed in a game that costs under fifteen dollars," Dille wrote, citing the failures of the Atari 2600 on this front.

And this, ultimately, would prove the console's Achilles heel. The market had been trained to follow franchises by this point, and the small number of developers that were making games for the SuperVision—mostly based in Hong Kong, with one British developer and another developer whose NES games were associated with the unlicensed US publisher Color Dreams—weren't really making big franchise-driven games. And that meant that the system was at a loss on the broader market.

Unlike other competitors, it actually showed up in some occasional mainstream places—for example, it was one of the available prizes for the Nickelodeon game show Legends of the Hidden Temple. But the real prize was for the console to show up in millions of kids' hands—and that's something it was never able to do.

Could you imagine the marketing meetings that led to these two names? Image: Wikimedia Commons

One console, two weird names

Of course, knockoffs of the Game Boy didn't start and end with the SuperVision, and some of them were much more blatant, even.

About a year after the release of the SuperVision, another Hong Kong-based company, called Welback Holdings, developed a device called the Mega Duck, which was clearly an attempt at getting in on a hot market.

On a technical front, the SuperVision and the Mega Duck were actually somewhat similar. While the SuperVision had a larger screen and more design quirks, both devices worked functionally the same. Like a Game Boy, basically. But Mega Duck perhaps might be the more interesting of the two consoles because of the fact that it was pulled into some pretty weird directions.

The corporate path of this specific device gets very confusing, in large part because Welback didn't actually sell the console itself, but handed it off to a variety of different firms to market and sell it. As a result, the console is known under a couple different names: In Europe, it was known as the Mega Duck and sold by companies like Creatronic, Videojet, and Hartung, but in Brazil, it was called the Cougar Boy and sold by a company called Cougar. (Yes, somehow this console has not one, but two of the weirdest names ever used for a video game console.)

Now, Welback was a developer in the mold of VTech, the onetime Apple II clone-maker, also based in Hong Kong, that had become successful thanks to its wide array of educational products—particularly faux-laptops. And some of VTech's ambition eventually showed itself with the Mega Duck.

In the mid-90s, Hartung released a version of the Mega Duck as a friggin' toy laptop, complete with musical keyboard, regular keyboard, and mouse. The YouTube channel The Retro Future has a great video explaining what this console actually does.

But perhaps the most interesting part about the Mega Duck is the printer on this bizarre pseudo-laptop. A few years before the Game Boy famously had its own printer, the knockoff world was introducing a handheld-borne device with a printer of its own. Nintendo must have been inspired.

No, the Mega Duck, nor the Cheetah Boy, didn't became hits—for one thing, like the SuperVision, they just didn't have that many good games. (Also like the SuperVision, demos of those games are on the Internet Archive, and MAME also supports this device as well.)

But as curios go, you could do a whole lot worse.

One of the most fascinating things about these clone systems is the fact that the corporate histories of the companies involved—manufacturers, vendors, and distributors—are so hard-to-follow.

I'm the kind of guy who does digging like this on the regular, and even I found the structure of the various corporations to be utterly confusing.

And I'm by no means a fanatic, like British comedian Stuart Ashen, who raised $74,000 for his 2013 film Ashens and The Quest For The Game Child on Indiegogo. Ashen, who became known in part because of his reviews of incredibly obscure handheld game consoles, wrote an entire movie based around the Game Child, which is a knockoff Game Boy-style clone that uses Tiger Electronics-like LCD graphics.

(The entire film, also featuring Warwick Davis of the NES video game Willow, is viewable on YouTube.)

In some cases, there's a lineage between devices. For example, the name Hartung is associated with some brands of both the Mega Duck and the Watara Supervision, along with an older, less-powerful device called the Game Master.

And the Taiwanese firm Thin Chen Enterprise, better known as Sachen, had fingerprints all over unlicensed NES games, NES clones, multicarts, and the libraries of both the SuperVision and the Mega Duck. The company even developed some Game Boy games! Sachen is a beast unto itself, worthy of its own Tedium issue someday.

But the best example of this weirdly complex corporate state of affairs is Welback Holdings, the firm that was responsible for the Mega Duck.

It's still around today. Kind of.

Launching in 1992 as Welback, it has gone through four separate name changes and is now known as Emperor Culture Group.

That company is owned by Albert Yeung, a billionaire investor (and plaintiff in a lawsuit against Google) who owns the firm's parent company, Emperor Group. The firm doesn't make knockoff video game consoles anymore, really. Emperor Culture Group is a local entertainment conglomerate that produces TV shows, owns movie theaters, and puts on live concerts.