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1
Arcade boardThe Arcade hardware landscape is made of many, many different boards, each running one or more games inside a cabinet. Please see this list for further information. In order to not pollute our hardware platforms too much with all these board information, we should push those one level down into the sub-platforms, hence the entry here. The relationship to the games released for these boards can later be mapped using the compatibility facility.
2
Hardware modelNot every machine of one hardware platform is the same. For instance, the console manufacturers used to release different generations of one console, with slight modifications, or let third party companies release clones under different names to increase game sales. See here for the Sega genesis example. This entry is to document these (official) different models, and document game incompatibilities that inevitably arose with them.
3
Inofficial cloneThis is like case 3, but regards to the illegal / inofficial re-builds of popular hardware platforms. Please read on here for further information. These clones could gain quite some popularity, especially within countries where the original hardware wasn't available, like in the Eastern Bloc.
4
Hardware with Emulator versionEmulation is a very important aspect of video game preservation, so within Oregami, it shall one day be possible to document emulation software and its versions as well as its compatibility to the games released for the emulated platform

This entry represents all published special hardware devices that make games playable on a specific game hardware previously available in the original (console or computer) using an internal emulator.
Examples: NES Mini, SNES Mini, C64 Mini.

Data List 26: Software Platform Types:

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