[5] The Game Gadget made use of a dual core[1] MIPS32 architecture[6] Ingenic JZ4750 CPU, which was clocked at 433 MHz.
[1] Additional outputs included stereo speakers, a headphone jack, and a micro USB port.
[6] Officially licensed Sega Mega Drive games were run with a version of the PicoDrive emulator.
[1] The system supported stereo playback of a number of audio codecs including MP3, WMA, APE, FLAC, WAV, AC3, MOD, S3M, XM and RealAudio.
The system included a photo viewer[3] that supports JPG, BMP, GIF, PNG file formats.
Further functions of the text reader include bookmarking, auto browsing, font sizing, and it can open while music is playing.