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Analogue 3D: Two-minute review
The Analogue 3D is finally here, and it’s one of the best retro games consoles available on the market. After multiple delays and what felt like a longer wait than those excruciating Christmas Eve sleeps as a kid, Analogue’s take on the iconic Nintendo 64 is in my hands, and I’ve been testing it thoroughly over the last couple of weeks.
Analogue’s approach to hardware is one of true love for nostalgia, allowing gamers to recreate the memories of their youth by playing original cartridges in 4K via an FPGA chip. This means the 3D is for the true enthusiast, someone who has a collection of N64 games and wants to experience their childhood in the best way possible.
Build quality is excellent, as you’d expect from the company that created the Analogue Pocket, and the console works with original N64 controllers as well as 8bitdo’s modern recreation, which has been purposefully built for use with the 3D.
The Analogue 3D is the quintessential Nintendo 64 experience, and is a must-buy for those looking to play the most authentic recreation of the console of their youth on one of the best OLED TVs. That said, it’s still an N64, so if you don’t have a physical collection or don’t have the necessary nostalgia to truly enjoy these often dated games, you may want to opt for a different era of retro gaming instead.
Analogue 3D: Price and availability
- List price: $249.99 / £190 / $AU 385
- Comes in two colors (white and black)
- Currently sold out
The Analogue 3D is now shipping via analogue.co. The 3D first went on preorder in October 2024, and while it’s now available, it is currently sold out on the Analogue website.
You can buy the 3D in Black or White, and in the box you’ll get an HDMI cable, USB-C for power, and a power adaptor. The 3D has no controller in the box, and while you can use any of your old N64 controllers, third-party company 8bitdo’s 64 controller is available for $39.99 / £32 in black and white via Amazon.
There are also no games included in the box, and no ability to play titles from other consoles with cartridge adaptors, so you’ll need to source your own physical N64 cartridges.
Analogue 3D: Specs
|
Price |
$249.99 / £190 / $AU385 |
|
Dimensions (H x W x L) |
1.9 x 9 x 7in / 49 x 230 x 180mm |
|
Weight |
29.5oz / 837g |
|
Compatibility |
Nintendo 64 |
|
Connection type |
USB-A, USB-C, HDMI, SD card |
|
Battery life |
N/A |
|
Features |
HDMI Out 4K resolution, faithful CRT recreation for modern TVs, 100% compatibility with original N64 cartridges |
|
Software |
Native OS |
Analogue 3D: Design and features
- Plastic but sturdy enclosure
- Looks elegant under your TV
- The best way to play N64 cartridges
The Analogue 3D is gorgeous, just like the other products in the company’s repertoire. It feels like the N64 grew up, and while some people will be waiting patiently for limited edition color offerings, I’m a big fan of the black and white options here. There’s no toy-like plastic, no rattling parts, and no leftover design weirdness from the late 90s.
Instead, Analogue has built a console that feels dense and premium while looking great on a shelf and even better underneath a TV, where it blends in with modern consoles rather than sticking out as a relic – this definitely passes the “Can I put this in the living room?” wife test.
The finish reminds me of high-end audio equipment, with lines that are clean, subtle edges, and a color palette that is understated without losing personality. Even the cartridge slot has a satisfying firmness, and inserting a cartridge has that awesome “thunk” you used to love as a child.
Around the back, you get HDMI out, USB-C for power, two USB-A, and an SD card slot pre-installed with a 16GB card for storing screenshots, firmware, and all the other OS information. On the front are four original N64 controller ports that light up satisfyingly when you connect a Bluetooth controller.
The Analogue 3D provides everything you need for a modern N64 experience without clutter or additional converters. The console plays your original cartridges using FPGA hardware, which means no emulation and no guesswork. What you’re seeing is effectively the real hardware recreated with jaw-dropping accuracy.
The menu interface is simple in the best possible way. With the tap of a button, you can tweak video settings, swap filters, and overclock the performance to try and beat the abysmal framerates of the original N64. It’s clean, responsive and takes seconds to navigate.
It’s worth noting, however, that save states are not available yet on the Analogue 3D, and we’re not sure when they will be. On my Analogue Pocket, the save state feature is one of my favorite parts of the device, and Analogue even showed the feature on the 3D in its marketing. Hopefully, save states will be available soon, and I’ll make sure to update the review as soon as they are.
Support for original controllers is a huge win, and while I didn’t test one myself, I can imagine the impracticality of the original thumb stick would add to the charm of the 3D experience. Modern controllers work very well, and pairing them takes seconds. The system automatically detects what’s connected, so you can jump straight into a game, but I’d recommend waiting for 8bitdo’s grey variant, which has colored buttons, as the all black N64 controller confused me at times.
Analogue 3D: Performance
- Faithful FPGA hardware emulation of N64 games
- 4K image quality with gorgeous CRT filters
- 100% cartridge compatibility
This is where the Analogue 3D earns its price tag. Playing N64 games on FPGA hardware is a completely different experience to emulation, and quite honestly the best way to experience your favorite games from the late 90s. Everything responds instantly, with no input lag, and it very much feels like a product made by Nintendo for an adult gamer wanting to relive their youth.
I tested the console on one of the best OLED TVs, 65-inch Samsung S90D OLED, which is about as far from a CRT as you can get. Somehow, the Analogue 3D handled it without exposing every flaw of the era. Colours looked vibrant, edges were cleaner than I’ve ever seen them on original hardware and the system held up beautifully whether I was playing Mario 64, Mario Party 3, GoldenEye 007 or even WCW/NWO Revenge.
But be warned, this isn’t a console that transforms the visuals into something modern. It preserves everything, flaws included, but that’s where the charm lies: it’s a 4k faithful restoration of the N64 and for people that love the awkward console, the 3D is a must-buy. Combined with Analogue’s gorgeous filters which the company calls “a museum-grade restoration of analogue gaming’s most beautiful display technology”, the 3D truly cements itself as the best way to play N64 on a modern TV.
There were a couple of moments where cartridges needed a second insertion to register properly, and of course, I found myself blowing cartridges (despite the fact that’s not recommended). In the box Analogue provides some foam pads to help clean the pins of your N64 cartridges, which is a lovely addition in case you’re having compatibility issues.
Image quality on the 3D really shines, but again, if you’re expecting to see an N64 game with modern graphics, you’ll be disappointed.
Polygon edges look cleaner, the scaling is smooth, and the whole image feels more stable than the original hardware ever managed. My Samsung S90D OLED made colours pop without turning everything into neon, and brightness levels were handled well enough that nothing felt washed out or overly crushed.
Like I mentioned above, Analogue includes a handful of optional filters. Adding light scanlines gave Mario 64 a nostalgic softness, while GoldenEye 007 benefited from a cleaner look without anything layered over the top. You can also adjust aspect ratio, remove overscan, and tweak settings depending on the game.
This is as good as N64 games are ever going to look without completely remaking them, but the hardware can’t hide the fact that some textures are muddy and some 3D models are… well… terrible. That said, the 3D does make these games look sharper, more consistent, and more pleasant to revisit.
Analogue has done an excellent job with compatibility, with the company claiming 100% compatibility for the first time ever. In my testing, everything worked flawlessly, although I don’t have the most extensive N64 catalog. Mario 64, Mario Party 3, GoldenEye 007 and WCW/NWO Revenge all worked exactly as I remembered them, quirks and all.
I’ve seen posts online from other reviewers stating EverDrive support varies depending on model, and it’s very unlikely that Analogue will officially endorse flash carts. So if you plan to use a single cartridge for all your games, then I suggest doing your homework before buying a 3D.
After using the 3D for a few weeks, I’m surprised by my experience. As someone who loves retro gaming and really appreciates what the company does for game preservation, I find this product way harder to recommend than, say, the Analogue Pocket or the Modretro Chromatic, for example. That might be because of my own personal nostalgia for the Game Boy era, but I think it’s more to do with the fact that the N64 has aged very poorly compared to even older games like those found on the SNES.
The Analogue 3D is a remarkable piece of hardware, but the N64 library itself hasn’t aged well. These games are fun, iconic, and historically important, but the jump from 2D to 3D was messy, and it shows. Textures are blurry, controls can feel floaty, and frame rates dip more than you might remember.
If you don’t have nostalgia for these games, the Analogue 3D won’t magically convert you. It’s very much a time machine for people who grew up in the late 90s and still feel emotional watching the boot logo appear on screen.
If that’s you, the console is magic. If not, a SNES or GameCube might be a better retro investment, and I think sticking to the N64 library on Nintendo Switch Online would probably meet your needs.
Should you buy the Analogue 3D
Buy it if…
Don’t buy it if…
Also consider…
If you’re still not entirely sold on the Analogue 3D then check out these excellent similar products for comparison and consideration.
| Row 0 – Cell 0 |
Analogue 3D |
Nintendo Switch 2 |
Nintendo Switch OLED |
|
Price |
$249.99 / £190 / $AU385 |
$429.99 / £395.99 / $AU699.95 |
$349.99 / £309.99 / $AU539.95 |
|
Dimensions |
1.9 x 9 x 7in / 49 x 230 x 180mm |
10.7 x 4.5 x 0.6in / 272 x 114 x 15mm |
4 x 9.5 x 0.5in / 10 x 2.4 x 1.4cm |
|
Weight |
29.5oz / 837g |
18.8oz / 535g |
14.88oz / 421.84g |
|
Compatibility |
Nintendo 64 cartridges |
Nintendo Switch 2 / Nintendo Switch / Nintendo Switch Online (N64, SNES, etc) |
Nintendo Switch / Nintendo Switch Online (N64, SNES, etc) |
|
Connection type |
Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, USB-C, HDMI output |
Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, USB-C, HDMI output (in TV mode) |
Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, USB-C, HDMI output (in TV mode) |
|
Battery life |
N/A |
2-5 hours |
4.5 to 9 hours, depending on usage |
|
Features |
4k output, VRR, Lag free, zero signal degradation, NTSC & PAL Support, museum-quality filter accuracy to recreate CRT |
8-inch OLED multi-touch display (1080p resolution), 256GB internal storage, improved stereo speakers, next-gen dock with 4K output and integrated LAN port, reinforced adjustable kickstand |
7.0-inch OLED multi-touch screen (1280×720 resolution), 64GB internal storage, stereo speakers, enhanced dock with built-in LAN port, adjustable wide kickstand |
|
Software |
Analogue 3Dos, can play official Nintendo 64 cartidges |
Runs all Nintendo Switch 2 games, access to Nintendo eShop and online services |
Runs all Nintendo Switch games, access to Nintendo eShop and online services |
How I tested the Analogue 3D
- Tested for 2 weeks
- Compared it directly to the experience on Nintendo Switch Online
- Tested across game types
I’ve used the Analogue 3D for the past few weeks, and it has become my main way to play Nintendo 64 games at home.
I’ve tested the console with all of my original cartridges, including Mario 64, Mario Party 3, GoldenEye 007 and WCW/NWO Revenge.
Every game was played on my Samsung S90D OLED TV, so I could properly judge the image quality and performance on a modern display. I tried all of Analogue’s display filters as well as overclocking the hardware via the built-in menu.
First tested November 2025











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