VG_Addict wrote:This happened to me last night when I got a game in the mail, which had been stopped until my family got back from vacation, and I popped it in my NES, and it didn't even work! I tried blowing on it for 20 minutes, and I couldn't even get to the start screen!
Never blow in your games. Your saliva will corrode the connectors. In those times that it helps, it's likely because the moisture helps the cartridge make an electrical connection. NES game connectors are especially sensitive.
Here's an easy and safe way to clean your games that I use very frequently:
Get a clean wash cloth, one that isn't intensely rough like a burlap sack or something, and a butter knife.
Wrap the wash cloth loosely once or twice around the thin end of the butter knife, leaving about half of the cloth in excess over the top, and fold the excess cloth over the top so the fold covers the tip of the knife. You don't want it to thick, it has to fit between the plastic wall of the card and the connector bridge.
Dampen the folded end of the cloth with water from the faucet. Don't soak it, you only need it
damp, not sopping. Both sides.
Got your game cart? Now, provided you haven't flooded the cloth with far too much water, and you've wrapped it appropriately, slot the covered tip of the butter knife into the cartridge, between the grey plastic and connectors, and scrub it a bit. Not too furiously. Repeat the process for the opposite side. If the cloth gets too dirty halfway through, you're going to want to refold and dampen the cloth so a new part is covering the tip - so you're not just spreading the dirt around.
So once you're done, give it a liiiittle time to dry off, and pop the game in. If you haven't wrecked your NES by sticking a flithy used game into it, and you don't use a Game Genie, you should be set. Might have to fiddle with it a little, tweaking the cart back and forth to get the connectors lined up, but that's what the reset button is really for.
If you DO use a Game Genie, you've probably already wrecked your system's connector pins by bending them too far, and should likely have to always use it to make the connection. The Game Genie is a system killer,
DON'T USE IT IF YOU CAN HELP IT. People think it makes their games connect better, and it does until the system's pins are so bent that the damn thing doesn't connect at all.
And while I'm busy telling you what NOT to do, I cannot emphasize this enough: NEVER PUT AN UNCLEANED, USED GAME CARTRIDGE YOU JUST BOUGHT INTO YOUR SYSTEM. I've seen
melted lollipops on connector pins. You DO NOT want that crap in your system connectors. In fact, while you're at it, you should probably clean every game you own, before you use them again and get system filth all over them.
And don't ever use alcohol or cleaning products to clean your NES. Pure rubbing alcohol corrodes the connectors, and other household chemicals can do the same or leave a residue. Water and a bit of rubbing works fine.