There’s a reason every retro emulation console of the last decade keeps cribbing from the same 1980s Japanese design playbook. The Famicom and the original SNES established a visual grammar for home gaming hardware that has never really been improved upon, just iterated, simplified, or fetishized. Cream-colored ABS plastic, primary-red accents, ribbed black ventilation grilles borrowed from HiFi separates, and chunky cross d-pads big enough to register through a winter glove. Analogue has built an entire premium business on faithfully reissuing this language. Anbernic and Miyoo have built equally large businesses on cheaply approximating it. What nobody has really done is take that grammar and warp it through a fashion-house sensibility.
A$AP Rocky’s Hommemade studio just gave it a shot. The HGC-V.1, or Hommemade Gaming Console Version One, is a flip-screen retro emulation system designed in-house at AWGE and built around a chunky, almost cartoonishly oversized form factor that reads like a Famicom rendered as a desk sculpture. Cream and slate-blue body panels, two red arcade-style thumbsticks, a cobalt cross d-pad, SNES-coded face buttons, and black ribbed heat sinks flanking a flip-up LCD that boots into a pixelated starfield with the Hommemade “h” logo glowing front and center. It’s a console designed to be looked at as much as played.
Designer: AWGE / Hommemade
The form language here rewards a closer look. Most retro consoles fall into one of two camps, the faithful reissue (Analogue Pocket, Mega Sg) or the all-in-one emulation handheld (the entire Anbernic catalog), and both prioritize either accuracy or portability. The HGC-V.1 ignores both briefs. It’s a tabletop unit, roughly the proportions of a 1980s portable TV, with a flip-up screen that gives it a clamshell silhouette closer to a Game Boy Advance SP scaled up to coffee-table size. The d-pad, joysticks, and face buttons are all deliberately oversized, pushing past ergonomic logic into something more sculptural. You don’t pick this up the way you’d pick up an Anbernic RG35XX. You sit at it.
The detailing is where the AWGE handprint gets loud. “HGC-V.1” sits in red Famicom-style lettering across the bezel, “Powered by AWGE” gets stamped in that scrappy hand-drawn type Rocky has used across his whole creative universe, and the chunky blue “h” logo on the right shoulder behaves less like a brand mark and more like a structural element, almost a handle. Around the back you get USB, what looks like HDMI out, and a physical toggle switch with the satisfying mechanical heft those late-90s appliances always had. The package ships with two wireless gamepads that crib NES proportions while smuggling in twin analog sticks and a four-button face cluster, essentially a hybrid retro-modern pad capable of running anything from NES ROMs through to early PS1 emulation.
No public price has been announced, which fits the Hommemade pattern. The label operates on a made-to-order basis through a single email address (hommemade@awge.com if you’re interested), and the rest of the Galaxy Collection ranges from $13,500 dividers to the $300,000 CBNT.V1 entertainment console covered by Hypebeast last week. Expect this to land somewhere in art-object territory rather than competing with the upcoming Steam Machine. The HGC-V.1 isn’t trying to win on specs or library size. It’s trying to win on the simpler proposition that gaming hardware can be a piece of furniture worth designing properly, and on that front, it makes a genuinely compelling case.
The post A$AP Rocky Just Made a Retro Gaming Console That Looks Like a Famicom on Steroids first appeared on Yanko Design.

