The BBC found itself at the center of gaming ridicule this week after a glaring hardware mishap during a live morning TV segment. During a feature on retro gaming, a Super Mario Bros. cartridge for the original Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) was shown awkwardly jammed into a Super Nintendo (SNES) console—a mistake that didn’t go unnoticed by viewers.
The BBC Breakfast segment featured UK Interactive Entertainment (UKIE) CEO Nick Poole showcasing retro consoles, including a ZX81, Wii, and SNES. However, the glaring issue arose when the camera panned to an NES cartridge (Super Mario Bros.) inserted into the SNES—a physical impossibility due to the different shapes and pin configurations of the two systems.
Gamers quickly took to social media to voice their amusement and frustration:
"I want to report a crime." – A Reddit comment with hundreds of upvotes.
"This display was either set up by someone who knows nothing about games or someone who knows a lot and wanted to troll us."
Others lamented the absence of the SEGA Mega Drive, the UK’s best-selling 16-bit console.
UKIE, the UK’s games industry trade body, swiftly distanced itself from the mistake, telling VGC:"For transparency, the studio team set up the display independently… unfortunately, we couldn’t adjust it whilst on air."
Overall this was a rather amusing turnout for what was originally going to be a pretty straightforward airing of retro consoles, was it not damaging for the hardware i would suggest BBC to have more of these cursed images show up every now and then to cause a ruckus.
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