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X86-based game consoles

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PlayStation 4
Sony's fourth home video game console, part of the eighth generation of consoles
Q13361286
home video game console developed by Microsoft
Q132020
video game console by Microsoft
PlayStation 5
Sony's ninth-generation and fifth home video game console
Xbox Series X and Series S
home video game consoles developed by Microsoft
WonderSwan
The is a handheld game console released in Japan by Bandai. Developed in collaboration with Gunpei Yokoi's company Koto Laboratory, it was the final piece of hardware Yokoi worked on before his death in 1997. Launched in Japan in March 1999 during the sixth generation of video game consoles, the WonderSwan was followed by two upgraded models, the WonderSwan Color and SwanCrystal, before Bandai discontinued the line in 2003. Throughout its lifespan, no version of the WonderSwan was officially released outside Japan.
FM Towns Marty
home video game console
Steam Machine
Steam Machine is a series of small form factor gaming computers by Valve, designed to operate SteamOS to provide a home game console-like experience. The first iteration of the Steam Machine was developed in collaboration with several computer vendors who were engaged with Valve to develop their own versions of Steam Machines for retail, offering additional options atop Valve's requirements such as dual-booting options with Windows and the ability to upgrade the computer. The second iteration is developed by Valve themselves. Consumers could digitally purchase video games on their Steam Machine through Valve's namesake Steam storefront.
Atari VCS
video game console by Atari
EVO Smart Console
media PC and video game console
Konix Multisystem
сancelled video game system under development by Konix
MoMA Eve
never released video game console
Tandy Video Information System
multimedia device
ApeXtreme
ApeXtreme is a cancelled video game console that was developed by Apex Digital. While the console made a promising first appearance at the Consumer Electronics Show in January 2004, it had been cancelled by December of that year. The console was initially based on VIA's Glory Personal Gaming Console Platform (although Apex Digital later switched to an AMD CPU and NVIDIA GPU platform), and would have included a keyboard, mouse, game controller, 3.5 inch floppy disk reader, and a remote control.