List of Consoles

This is a list of the various consoles that can be used to play Golden Sun and Golden Sun: The Lost Age.

Game Boy Advance
The Game Boy Advance (often shortened to GBA) is a 32-bit handheld video game console developed, manufactured and marketed by Nintendo and released in 2001. It is the original system Golden Sun was specifically designed for. The original design of GBA, however, did not feature backlighting and required batteries.

Two models of the GBA were released in the following years. In 2003 a laptop-like model named the Game Boy Advance SP was released, featuring frontlighting and a rechargeable lithium ion battery.

In 2005, in addition to a near-identical model named the Game Boy Advance SP+ which this time featured backlighting, a more slim backlit GBA model named the Game Boy Micro was released. This version did not have a large impact on the market because, unlike the other GBA models, it could not play older Game Boy games, and in a mere half-year Nintendo's current handheld, the Nintendo DS, was released.

Game Boy Player
The Game Boy Player is an add-on style device that fits onto the bottom of a Nintendo GameCube. This device, which is essentially comprised of the hardware inside the Game Boy Advance and has a cartridge slot at its front end, enables Game Boy Advance cartridges, as well as Game Boy and Game Boy Color cartridges, to be played on a television with a GameCube controller. (A GBA system connected into the first controller port via a link cable is also usable as a controller.) It requires the use of an included boot disc to access the hardware and turn on the software.

Golden Sun: The Lost Age was one of the titles the Player's marketing campaign specifically advertised as recommended to play on a full screen with the Player, alongside Pokemon Ruby & Sapphire and Fire Emblem.

Nintendo DS
The Nintendo DS is Nintendo's current handheld console, and a direct upgrade and successor to the GBA. The most obvious features of this clamshell-designed device, released in late 2004, are its two equally sized screens, with the bottom screen specially designed as a "touch screen" that works with a provided stylus for screen-pressing gameplay alongside traditional buttons, and also a microphone that can recognize the player's voice. The system has open slots for both a DS game card and a Game Boy Advance cartridge, allowing both libraries of games to be played (although Game Boy and Game Boy Color cartridges are incompatible), and some DS games respond to the GBA game that's currently inserted into the GBA slot. A GBA game played on the system will display on one of the two screens (which one it is the player can choose). The system also has a backlight that can be toggled on or off and has a rechargeable lithium ion battery. Unlike the GBA models, its connectivity with other DS systems (as well as Nintendo's Wii) is entirely wireless, and supports an online scene.

Released in early 2006 is the DS' upgraded remodel, the Nintendo DS Lite. A slimmer and more lightweight redesign, the DS Lite is very similar to the original but has four levels of brightness for its LCD display (though the backlight can not be turned off now). The GBA cart also now protrudes out of the bottom of the system by roughly a centimeter.

Many in the Golden Sun community speculate that a third Golden Sun game would most likely be released for this system, and that having The Lost Age in the GBA slot would be the method of transferring Completed Data information into the DS cart.