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The "(Unl)" tag identifies this as an product, meaning it was produced without Nintendo’s authorization. These cartridges were typically manufactured in Taiwan or mainland China and distributed through flea markets or small independent shops.
: To change between the Red and Blue versions, players usually had to flick a physical switch on the cartridge or simply turn the Game Boy off and back on to cycle through the menu. Pokemon Red-Blue 2-in-1 (Unl)
: The artwork on these cartridges is often a surreal blend of official assets, fan art, and occasionally entirely different games, making them visual curiosities for Game Boy collectors . The "(Unl)" tag identifies this as an product,
is a notorious unlicensed (bootleg) multicart that surfaced in the late 1990s and early 2000s, designed to exploit the massive popularity of the Pokémon franchise. Unlike official releases that required a Game Link Cable and two separate cartridges to "catch 'em all," this bootleg promised both versions on a single piece of plastic. The Nature of the "Unlicensed" Beast : The artwork on these cartridges is often